图阿佩卡金矿的生与死——利益相关者为社区博物馆的生物考古展览提供意见

IF 2 Q2 COMMUNICATION JCOM-Journal of Science Communication Pub Date : 2023-06-04 DOI:10.22323/2.22020802
Ruby Parker, Nancy Longnecker
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这一实践见解描述了社区咨询和展览的创建,该展览被安装在当地博物馆中,以分享涉及历史墓地挖掘的研究结果。在新西兰奥塔哥地区劳伦斯镇历史悠久的墓地中,有两具尸体被埋在没有标记的地方,他们被挖掘出来进行生物考古研究,其中包括生物化学方法。结果与奥塔哥淘金热时代的文化和环境信息相结合,重建了这些定居者的生活,并在这里描述的展览中讲述了他们的故事。通过16次半结构化的利益相关者访谈,探讨了与人类遗骸相关的展品表征的社区价值观。受访者绝大多数(但不是一致)支持举办关于这项研究的展览。受访者建议排除展品的东西(人类遗骸或图像),以及包括的信息和物品。信息来自多种来源,包括:现有的生物考古研究成果;与后代群体、社区和其他利益相关者的访谈;还有历史档案。来自这些不同来源的信息被结合在一起,创造了两个人的骨传——一个女人和一个中国工人——他们在淘金热时期(1850-1910)住在劳伦斯。这些骨传记构成了一个展览的基础,这个展览是在他们的坟墓所在的城镇的一个社区博物馆里创建和安装的。
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Life and Death on the Tuapeka Goldfields — stakeholder input for a community museum's bioarchaeology-based exhibit
This practice insight describes community consultation and creation of an exhibit that was installed in a local museum to share findings from research involving excavations of historic cemeteries. Two individuals who had been buried in unmarked sites in historic cemeteries in the town of Lawrence, in the Otago region of New Zealand were exhumed for bioarchaeological research that included biochemical methods. Results were combined with cultural and environmental information from the Otago goldrush era to reconstruct lives of these settlers and tell their stories in the exhibit described here. Community values about exhibit representations related to human remains were explored through 16 semi-structured stakeholder interviews. Interviewees overwhelmingly but not unanimously supported the creation of an exhibit about this research. Interviewees recommended things to exclude from the exhibit (human remains or images of them) as well as information and objects to include. Information was compiled from multiple sources, including: existing bioarchaeological research findings; interviews with descendant groups, community, and other stakeholders; and historical archives. Information from these multiple sources was combined to create osteobiographies of two individuals — a woman and a Chinese journeyman — who had lived in Lawrence during the goldrush period (1850–1910). These osteobiographies formed the basis of an exhibit that was created and installed in a community museum in the town where their graves were located.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
22.20%
发文量
80
审稿时长
5 weeks
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