13 Tex. Admin. Code § 26.3 - Definitions
The following words and terms, when used in this chapter, shall have the following meanings unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. These definitions also clarify the interpretation of terms and phrases used in the Antiquities Code of Texas but not defined therein.
(1) Accession--The formal acceptance of a
collection and its recording into the holdings of a curatorial facility and
generally includes a transfer of title. For held-in-trust collections,
stewardship but not title is transferred to the curatorial facility.
(2) Antiquities Advisory Board--A ten-member
board that advises the commission in reviewing matters related to the
Antiquities Code of Texas.
(3)
Antiquities Permit or Permit--Authorization for work on a designated or
potential State Antiquities Landmark, or survey investigations to determine if
cultural resources are present. Permit types include Archeological Permits
(§
26.15 of this title) and Historic
Buildings and Structures Permits (§
26.22 of this title).
(4) Applicant--Relative to an Antiquities
Permit, an applicant is the controlling agency, organization, or political
subdivision having administrative control over a publicly owned landmark or the
owner of a privately owned landmark. Applicant may also refer to an individual
or private group that desires to nominate a building or site for landmark
designation.
(5) Archeological
site--Any land or marine-based place containing evidence of prehistoric or
historic human activity, including, but not limited to, the following:
(A) Habitation sites. Habitation sites are
areas or structures where people live or have lived on a permanent or temporary
basis.
(B) Native American open
campsites which were occupied on a temporary, seasonal, or intermittent
basis.
(C) Rock shelters, in
general, are a special kind of campsite. These sites are located in caves or
under rock overhangs and have been occupied either: temporarily, seasonally, or
intermittently.
(D) Non-Native
American campsites are the cultural remains of activities by people who are not
Native American.
(E) Residence
sites are those where routine daily activities were carried out and which were
intended for year-round use.
(F)
Non-Native American sites may include, in addition to the main structure,
outbuildings, water systems, trash dumps, garden areas, driveways, and other
remains that were an integral part of the site when it was inhabited.
(G) Non-habitation sites. Non-habitation
sites result from use during specialized activities and may include standing
structures.
(i) Rock art and graffiti sites
consist of symbols or representations that have been painted, ground, carved,
sculpted, scratched, or pecked on or into the surface of rocks, wood, or metal,
including, but not limited to, Native American pictographs and petroglyphs,
historical graffiti and inscriptions.
(ii) Mines, quarry areas, and lithic
procurement sites are those from which raw materials such as flint, clay, coal,
minerals, or other materials were collected or mined for future use.
(iii) Game procurement and processing sites
are areas where game was killed or butchered for food or hides.
(iv) Fortifications, battlefields, training
grounds and skirmish sites including fortifications of the historic period and
the central areas of encounters between opposing forces, whether a major
battleground or areas of small skirmishes.
(v) Cache--A collection of artifacts that are
deliberately hidden for future use. Caches are often discovered in burials or
in caves and usually consist of ceremonial and ritual objects, functional
objects or emergency food supplies.
(6) Archeological Survey Standards for
Texas--Minimum survey standards developed by the commission in consultation
with the Council of Texas Archeologists.
(7) Artifacts--The tangible objects of the
past that relate to human life and culture. Examples include, but are not
limited to, projectile points, tools, documents, art forms, and
technologies.
(8) Board--The
Antiquities Advisory Board.
(9)
Building--A structure created to shelter any form of human activity, such as a
courthouse, city hall, church, hotel, house, barn, or similar structure.
Building may refer to a historically related complex such as a courthouse and
jail or a house and barn.
(10)
Burials and burial pits--Marked and unmarked locales of a human burial or
burials. Burials and burial pits may contain the remains of one or more
individuals located in a common grave in a locale. The site area may contain
gravestones, markers, containers, coverings, garments, vessels, tools, and
other grave objects or could be evidenced by the presence of depressions, pit
feature stains, or other archeological evidence.
(11) Cemetery--A place that is used or
intended to be used for interment, and includes a graveyard, burial park,
unknown cemetery, abandoned cemetery, mausoleum, or any other area containing
one or more graves or unidentified graves.
(A)
Abandoned cemetery--A non-perpetual care cemetery containing one or more graves
and possessing cemetery elements for which no cemetery organization exists and
which is not otherwise maintained by any caretakers. It may or may not be
recorded in the deed records of the county in which it lies.
(B) Unidentified grave--A grave that is not
marked in a manner that provides the identity of the interment.
(C) Unknown cemetery--An abandoned cemetery
evidenced by the presence of marked or unmarked graves that does not appear on
a map or in deed records.
(12) Commission--The Texas Historical
Commission and its staff.
(13)
Committee, or Antiquities Committee, or Texas Antiquities Committee--As
redefined by the 74th Texas Legislature within §
191.003 of the
Texas Natural Resources Code, committee means the commission and/or staff
members of the commission.
(14)
Conservation--Scientific laboratory processes for cleaning, stabilizing,
restoring, preserving artifacts, and the preservation of buildings, sites,
structures and objects.
(15)
Council of Texas Archeologists--A non-profit voluntary organization that
promotes the goals of professional archeology in the State of Texas.
(16) Council of Texas Archeologists
Guidelines--Professional and ethical standards which provide a code of
self-regulation for archeological professionals in Texas with regard to field
methods, reporting, and curation.
(17) Cultural landscape--A geographic area,
associated with a historic event, activity, or person or exhibiting other
cultural or aesthetic values. Cultural landscapes include historic sites,
historic designed landscapes, and historic vernacular landscapes, as further
described in the National Park Service's Preservation Brief 36: Protecting
Cultural Landscapes.
(18) Cultural
resource--Any building, site, structure, object, artifact, historic shipwreck,
landscape, location of historical, archeological, educational, or scientific
interest, including, but not limited to, prehistoric and historic Native
American or aboriginal campsites, dwellings, and habitation sites,
archeological sites of every character, treasure embedded in the earth, sunken
or abandoned ships and wrecks of the sea or any part of the contents thereof,
maps, records, documents, books, artifacts, and implements of culture in any
way related to the inhabitants' prehistory, history, government, or culture.
Examples of cultural resources include Native American mounds and campgrounds,
aboriginal lithic resource areas, early industrial and engineering sites, rock
art, early cottage and craft industry sites, bison kill sites, cemeteries,
battlegrounds, all manner of historic buildings and structures, local
historical records, cultural landscapes, etc.
(19) Curatorial facility--A museum or
repository.
(20) Default--Failure
to fulfill all conditions of a permit or contract, issued or granted to
permittee(s), sponsors, and principal investigator or investigative firm,
before the permit has expired.
(21)
Defaulted permit--A permit that has expired without all permit terms and
conditions having been met before the permit expiration date.
(22) Designated historic district--An area of
archeological, architectural, or historical significance that is listed in the
National Register of Historic Places, either individually or as a historic
district; designated as a landmark, or nominated for designation as a landmark;
or identified by State agencies or political subdivisions of the State as a
historically sensitive site, district, or area. This includes historical
designation by local landmark commissions, boards, or other public authorities,
or through local preservation ordinances.
(23) Destructive analysis--Destroying all or
a portion of an object or sample to gain specialized information. For purposes
of this chapter, it does not include analysis of objects or samples prior to
their being accessioned by a curatorial facility.
(24) Discovery--The act of locating,
recording, and reporting a cultural resource.
(25) Disposal--The discard of an object or
sample after being recovered and prior to accession, or after
deaccession.
(26) District--A
significant concentration, linkage, or continuity of sites, buildings,
structures, or objects unified historically or aesthetically by plan or
physical development. See also "designated historic district."
(27) Eligible--Archeological sites or other
historic properties that meet the criteria set forth in §§26.10 -
26.12 and §26.19 of these titles (relating to Criteria for Evaluating
Archeological Sites and Verifying Cemeteries, Criteria for Evaluating
Shipwrecks, Criteria for Evaluating Caches and Collections, and Criteria for
Evaluating Historic Buildings and Structures, respectively) are eligible for
official landmark designation.
(28)
Exhumation--The excavation of human burials or cemeteries and its associated
funerary objects by a professional archeologist, or principal
investigator.
(29)
Groundbreaking--Construction or earth moving activities that disturb lands
owned or controlled by state agencies or political subdivisions of the
state.
(30) Held-in-trust
collection--Those state-associated collections under the authority of the
commission that are placed in a curatorial facility for care and management;
stewardship is transferred to that curatorial facility but not
ownership.
(31) Historic buildings
and structures permit--Historic buildings and structures permits are those
issued for work to buildings, structures, cultural landscapes, and
non-archeological sites, objects, and districts designated or nominated for
designation as landmarks.
(32)
Historic property--A district, site, building, structure or object significant
in American history, architecture, engineering, archeology or
culture.
(33) Historic time
period--For the purposes of landmark designation, this time period is defined
as extending from A.D. 1500 to 50 years before the present.
(34) Human remains--The body of a
decedent.
(35) Integrity--The
authenticity of a property's historic identity, evidenced by the survival of
physical characteristics that existed during the property's historic or
prehistoric period, including the property's location, design, setting,
materials, workmanship, feeling, and association.
(36) Interment--The intended permanent
disposition of human remains by entombment, burial, or placement in a
niche.
(37)
Investigation--Archeological or architectural activity including, but not
limited to: reconnaissance or intensive survey, testing, exhumation, or data
recovery; underwater archeological survey, test excavation, or data recovery
excavations; monitoring; measured drawings; or photographic
documentation.
(38) Investigative
firm--A company or scientific institution that has full-time experienced
research personnel capable of handling investigations and employs a principal
investigator, and/or project architect, or other project professional as
applicable under "professional personnel" in paragraph (52) of this section.
The company or institution holds equal responsibilities with the professional
personnel to complete requirements under an Antiquities Permit.
(39) Land-owning or controlling agency--Any
state agency or political subdivision of the state that owns or controls the
land(s) in question.
(40)
Landmark--A State Antiquities Landmark.
(41) Marker--An informational aluminum sign
erected by or with the permission of the Texas Historical Commission.
(42) Mitigation--The amelioration of the
potential total or partial loss of significant cultural resources. For example,
mitigation for removal of a deteriorated historic building feature might
include photographs and drawings of the feature, and installing a replacement
that matches the original in form, material, color, etc. Mitigation for the
loss of an archeological site might be accomplished through data recovery
actions, to preserve or recover an appropriate amount of data by application of
current professional techniques and procedures, as defined in the permit's
scope of work.
(43)
Monument--Includes features planted, built, or installed that commemorate or
designate the importance of an event, person, or place, which may or may not be
located at the site(s) they commemorate, such as stone or metal monuments and
statuary as well as trees, shrubs, designed landscapes, and other plantings
located on public grounds such as courthouse squares and parks. Aluminum
markers erected by or with the permission of the commission are not included in
this definition.
(44) National
Register of Historic Places--A register of districts, sites, buildings,
structures, and objects significant in American history, architecture,
archeology, and culture maintained by the United States Secretary of the
Interior. Information concerning the National Register of Historic Places is
available through the commission or from the National Park Service at
www.nps.gov/nr.
(45) Object--The
term "object" can refer to artifacts or is a type of structure that is
primarily artistic in nature or are relatively small in scale and simply
constructed. Although it may be, by nature or design, movable, an object is
associated with a specific setting or environment. Examples of objects include
artifacts, monuments, markers, and sculpture.
(46) Permit application offense--Failure to
properly apply for a permit and/or receive authorization for an emergency
permit by the commission, prior to the actual performance of an archeological
investigation or other project work.
(47) Permit censuring--A restriction in the
ability of a principal investigator or other professional personnel and/or an
investigative firm or other professional firm to be issued a permit under the
auspices of the Antiquities Code of Texas.
(48) Permittee--The landowning or controlling
individual or public agency and/or a project sponsor that is issued an
Antiquities Permit for an archeological investigation or other project
work.
(49) Political subdivision--A
unit of local government created and operating under the laws of this state,
including a city, county, school district, or special district created under
the Texas Constitution.
(50)
Prehistoric time period--For the purpose of landmark designation, a time period
that encompasses a great length of time beginning when humans first entered the
New World and ending with the arrival of the Spanish Europeans, which has been
approximated for purposes of these guidelines at A.D. 1500.
(51) Professional firm--A company or
scientific institution that has professional personnel who meet the required
qualifications for specific types of work. The company or institution holds
equal responsibilities with the professional personnel to complete requirements
under an Antiquities Permit.
(52)
Professional personnel--Trained specialists who meet the professional
qualifications standards in §
26.4 of this title (relating to
Professional Qualifications and Requirements) and are required to perform
archeological and architectural investigations and project work.
(53) Project--Activity on a cultural resource
including, but not limited to: investigation, survey, testing, excavation,
restoration, demolition, scientific or educational study.
(54) Project sponsor--A public agency,
individual, institution, investigative firm or other professional firm,
organization, corporation, contractor, and/or company paying costs of
archeological investigation or other project work, or that sponsors, funds, or
otherwise functions as a party under a permit.
(55) Public agency--Any state agency or
political subdivision of the state.
(56) Public lands--Non-federal, public lands
that are owned or controlled by the State of Texas or any of its political
subdivisions, including the tidelands, submerged land, and the bed of the sea
within the jurisdiction of the State of Texas.
(57) Recorded archeological site--Sites that
are recorded, listed, or registered with an institution, agency, or university,
such as the Texas Archeological Research Laboratory of the University of Texas
at Austin.
(58) Register of
professional archeologists--A voluntary national professional organization of
archeologists which registers qualified archeologists.
(59) Research design--A written theoretical
approach and a plan for implementing fieldwork that also explains the goals and
methods of the investigation. A research design is developed prior to the
implementation of the field study and submitted with a completed Archeological
Permit Application.
(60) Ruins--A
historic or prehistoric site, composed of both archeological and structural
remains, in which the building or structure is in a state of collapse or
deterioration to the point that the original roof and/or flooring and/or walls
are either missing, partially missing, collapsed, partially collapsed, or
seriously damaged through natural forces or structural collapse. Ruins are
considered archeological sites, and historic buildings or structures recently
damaged or destroyed are not classified as ruins.
(61) Scope of work--A summary of the
methodological techniques used to perform the archeological investigation or
outline of other project work under permit.
(62) Shipwrecks--The wrecks of naval vessels,
Spanish treasure ships, coastal trading schooners, sailing ships, steamships,
and river steamships, among other remains of any waterborne craft that sank,
ran aground, was beached or docked.
(63) Significance--Importance attributed to
sites, buildings, structures and objects of historical, architectural, and
archeological value which are landmarks and eligible for official designation
and protection under the Antiquities Code of Texas. Historical significance is
the importance of a property to the history, architecture, archeology,
engineering or culture of a community, state or the nation, and is a trait
attributable to properties listed or determined eligible for listing in the
National Register of Historic Places or for state landmark
designation.
(64) Site--Any place
or location containing physical evidence of human activity. Examples of sites
include: the location of prehistoric or historic occupations or activities, a
group or district of buildings or structures that share a common historical
context or period of significance, and designed cultural landscapes such as
parks and gardens.
(65) State
agency--A department, commission, board, office, or other agency that is a part
of state government and that is created by the constitution or a statute of
this state. The term includes an institution of higher education as defined by
the Texas Education Code, §
61.003.
(66) State Antiquities Landmark--An
archeological site, archeological collection, ruin, building, structure,
cultural landscape, site, engineering feature, monument or other object, or
district that is officially designated as a landmark or treated as a landmark
under the interim protection described in §
26.8(d) of this
title (relating to Designation Procedures for Publicly Owned
Landmarks).
(67) State
Archeological Landmark--A State Antiquities Landmark.
(68) State associated collections--The
collections owned by the State and under the authority of the commission. This
includes the following:
(A) Permitted
collections--Collections that are the result of work governed by the
Antiquities Code of Texas on land or under waters belonging to the State of
Texas or any political subdivision of the State requiring the issuance of a
permit by the commission.
(B)
Non-permitted collections--Collections that are the result of work governed by
the Antiquities Code of Texas on land or under waters belonging to the State of
Texas or any political subdivision of the State conducted by commission
personnel without the issuance of a permit.
(C) Purchased collections--Collections that
are the result of the acquisition of significant historical items by the
commission through Texas Historical Artifacts Acquisition Program or use of
other State funds.
(D) Donated
collections--Collections that are the result of a gift, donation, or bequest to
the commission.
(E) Court-action
collections--Collections that are awarded to the commission by a court through
confiscation of illegally-obtained archeological artifacts or any other
material that may be awarded to the commission by a court of law.
(F) Legislative action
collections--Collections that are transferred to the commission through
legislative action.
(69)
Structure--A work made up of interdependent and interrelated parts in a
definite pattern of organization. The term "structure" is used to distinguish
from buildings, whose functional constructions were made usually for purposes
other than creating human shelter. Constructed by man, it is often an
engineering project. Examples of structures include bridges, power plants,
water towers, silos, windmills, grain elevators, etc. As used herein,
"structure" is also understood to include all non-archeological cultural
resources that are not buildings, including cultural landscapes and
non-archeological sites, objects, and districts.
(70) Treasures embedded in the earth--In this
context, "treasures" refers to artifacts and objects from submerged
archeological sites. This can reference artifacts that are either contained
within a ship's hull or are isolated yet associated with submerged historic
and/or prehistoric archeological sites. The term "treasures" is not meant to
imply that objects of monetary value, such as gold and silver, are separately
protected under Antiquities Code of Texas. Additionally, "embedded in the
earth" refers to artifacts or objects buried or partially covered in underwater
sediments.
(71) Unverified
cemetery--A location having some evidence of human burial interments, but in
which the presence of one or more unmarked graves has not been verified by a
person described by §
711.0105(a)
of the Health and Safety Code of Texas or by the commission.
(72) Verified cemetery--The location of a
human burial interment or interments as verified by the commission.
Notes
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