CRSP is a transitional program that encourages clients to transition toward less intensive daytime structured services, such as the PRS Recovery Academies, supportive employment programs, etc. CRSP operates 5 hours per day, 5 days per week.
Find out more about the Certification Examinations. For Information on Reciprocal Agreements. A career in OHS can lead to a wide range of opportunities. Find out more about working in occupational health and safety. This program ensures that certificants keep pace with changes affecting professional OHS practice.
As a safety professional or safety technician, you have many options and choices when it comes to your career path. Only you can make the choice to pursue a safety certification. BCRSP certified individuals receive the best opportunities for career advancement and are sought for their expertise.
Provenience numbers are a sequential order of numbers given to each excavation unit and level for example Unit 1, Level 1 is given a provenience number 1, Unit 1, Level 2 is given provenience number 2, and so on. A Specimen number is given to each artifact entry in sequential order within each provenience.
The specimen numbering starts over again with each new level. By combining the accession, provenience, and specimen numbers a reference index is created to link an item to its available archaeological provenience record. The artifact bags are sequentially ordered in archival boxes and all related paperwork associated with the site is collected and organized into archival folders.
In addition, a digital copy and a printed hardcopy of the artifact report is made. Then the site with all its artifacts and paperwork is moved into the Anthropology Collections for future researchers. The Cultural Resources Survey Program's Archaeology Lab participates in various public outreach programs throughout the year. The CRSP lab provides tours for high-school and college groups, as well as interested groups from other institutions. In addition, the lab offers a behind-the-scenes tour to the public in which the lab directors give presentations on the procedures and the research that is involved in processing artifacts.
The lab also designs exhibits using artifacts recovered from excavated sites that best illustrates the history of the sites occupation. The lab provides technical assistance and advice to callers or visitors who have inquiries about artifacts history or care.
Additionally, the Archaeology lab field questions from the landowners' from whose property the artifacts are excavated. The Architectural Survey of the Cultural Resource Survey Program identifies and documents National Register of Historic Places architectural properties that are subject to highway construction and other impacts.
Architectural properties may include buildings, bridges, monuments, cemeteries, and landscapes located in rural, village, and urban settings. These properties may have collective significance as an Historic District under these criteria. The context is often village or town wide but may be regional or statewide. Reconnaissance surveys are conducted initially to identify properties that are eligible for the National Register. Often these are corridor surveys where highway reconstruction may affect mature trees, stone walls, slate sidewalks, and other associated features.
Eligible properties have included log and plank houses, institutional and industrial complexes, village parks and cemeteries, stone arch bridges, and canal features. The documentation consists of large format black and white photography with descriptive and historical information consistent with local, state, or national significance. Historic highway and canal bridges comprise the majority of these projects. Others have included a Dutch Colonial house to be rehabilitated as a museum, an Erie Canal store near a proposed roundabout, an 's firehouse located beneath a highway overpass, and an abandoned parkway service station.
Historic Setting Analyses are prepared where highway reconstruction may affect a village Historic District or an Historic Landscape. These provide contextual research and photo documentation comparing the historic and modern streetscape, with attention to street configurations, sidewalks, lighting, parks, trees, walls, and other features that may be affected.
The intent is to guide context sensitive planning for the new highway. Archaeology is concerned with the spatial relationships of materials and features, and the recording and visualizing of these finds and their locations is an important aspect of the archaeological process. At the Cultural Resources Survey Program, artifact illustration, geographic information systems, and mapping techniques are utilized during the various phases of excavation and analysis.
Mapping of a CRSP project areas usually begins in the office using data and information available on the internet and from other agencies. This information is compiled to make a map appropriate for use by archaeologists in the field. The location of every excavated area and other features are recorded in the field and added to the map. Other drawings done in the field include plans of excavation units and wall profiles. These help the archaeologist in the determining the stratigraphic sequence of the site.
With GIS, artifact density maps, soil survey maps, elevation models, and other thematic maps are produced. This spatial information is used to analyze what is found during the excavation and in planning future excavations. Illustration is a useful tool for graphically showing the form and function of an artifact.
Prehistoric and historic artifacts recovered from a site are illustrated to show the diagnostic features or identifiable characteristics of the objects. The manual walks users through installing and operating the program. Included are three simulations designed to familiarize users with the software. The tutorial example highlights how to create a new project and enter the necessary data. LIDAR is a 3D mapping technology that uses a laser to rapidly scan and produce high-resolution images of areas such as rock slopes and outcrops.
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