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The
Archive has established standards for three basis levels of site
documentation. These levels, in turn, facilitate corresponding
levels of research.
LEVEL
ONE Content: Site Records (Location)
“Low-order
meaning” is the minimum interpretive level at which rock
art sites may be regarded. Usually, it is based upon observation
of location, rock art type description, rock art production type
description, and suggested or accepted ethnic or cultural group
boundaries. It requires only minimum documentation, including
a site record with basic identifying information. If objective
criteria are employed as part of the site record description,
rock art element forms are sometimes ordered into types and/or
other categories. Statistical analyses are rare at this level.
Level One consists of Site Records, which The Archive holds for
virtually every county in California in which rock art sites are
located. This is the minimum documentation required by the State
of California for an archaeological site of any type, and must
include the state trinomial designation, site name if known and
a USGS map reference if possible, If the site is recorded for
the first time, a site number must be assigned after a records
search. A sketch map is also useful. If the site is out of state,
the prevailing standards in the area apply. If the site is in
Mexico, jurisdiction and standard are set by INAH and copies of
these standards are on file.
Level
One Access: Basic Search Request
Users may make a Level One search request by contacting the
UCLA Rock Art Archive by telephone, post, or email during regularly
scheduled hours. Staff will search Site Records and Site Reports
if given the site name, county or country location, and/or site
number identification, and will provide a description of the
types of documentation on file, as well as the quantity and
quality of that documentation. An index of unpublished manuscripts
and books
in the UCLA Rock Art Archive library may be consulted in person.
There is a limit of three sites for remote search requests.
LEVEL
TWO Content: Site Report (Location & Preliminary Analysis)
“Higher-order
meaning” level of documentation requires a site report including
a large sample of rock art and as near to 100% recording of that
found on a single site as is possible. This enables statistical
analyses, and types may be ordered into increasingly more refined,
distinctive, and appropriate categories and inventory media. Similarities
and differences are defined across time and space and patterns
may be sought.The Archive holds Site Reports for many (but not
all) rock art sites for which we hold Site Records. Site Reports
constitute our Level Two standard of documentation, and always
contain a copy of the State of California site record (if within
the state). If not, the prevailing state standards apply. If in
Mexico, INAH standards apply. This level of documentation includes
everything that makes up a site record, but may also include elaboration
of maps to include loci designations; map records search data;
drawings of individual elements or compositions of elements; site
overview photos; photos or drawings of elements, compositions,
loci relationships, video documentation. These data also provide
a descriptive analysis of content based upon isolating and describing
forms using objective criteria, and then order them into types
or other categories. Statistical analysis may or may not be employed
and the sample should be large, with as near to 100% of the content
as possible recorded.
Level Two Access: Search Request Procedure
Users may make a Level Two search request by contacting the UCLA
Rock Art Archive by telephone, post, or email during regularly
scheduled hours. Staff will search Site Records, Site Reports,
and Collections if Level One information is provided along with
further description consisting of panel numbers, element numbers,
element categories, published or unpublished references, or other
data specifically identifying the panel or element being searched.
An index of unpublished manuscripts and books in the UCLA Rock
Art Archive library may be consulted in person. There is a limit
of three sites for remote search requests.
LEVEL THREE Content: Analysis and Interpretive
Research
“Highest-Order
Meaning” level of documentation includes a site record and
an elaboration of a site report at the dissertation or publication
level, and includes as near to 100 % field documentation of the
rock art as is reasonably possible. The Archive holds a large
collection of several thousand unpublished documents in our Manuscript
Bibliography File. These materials are, in general, highly variable
in type and rather uneven in quality. Descriptive analyses are
sophisticated and refined to the level of objectively defined
taxonomy. Historical and ethnographic analyses might be included,
as might highly objective distribution studies, environmental/cultural
analyses, etc. Metaphor (as understood from direct historical
or ethnohistorical analyses) is employed to elaborate the patterns
of motif similarities and differences. In the opinions of some
researchers, this level of analysis is only reached when objects
or symbols are observed in performance contexts.
Level
Three Access: Search Request Procedure
Level Three data is available through a research visit to the
Archive. Users may make a Level Three access request by contacting
the UCLA Rock Art Archive by telephone, post, or email during
regularly scheduled hours. Level Three access requires a site
visit to the UCLA Rock Art Archive after downloading, signing,
and returning the Access Form and
providing the requested recommendations. An index of unpublished
manuscripts and books in the
UCLA Rock Art Archive library may be consulted in person. Notes
to User and a Fees Schedule for copying
or using Archive materials is provided.
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