Annual Report for Heritage Monitoring Scouts 2018-2019
Heritage Monitoring Scouts (HMS Florida)
Annual Report August 1, 2018- July 30, 2019
Sarah E. Miller and Emily Jane Murray
Florida Public Archaeology Network | November 18, 2019 revised March 17, 2021
HMS
Florida Celebrates Third Year
Historical resources in
Florida are in danger from impacts of climate change including increased
storminess, rising temperatures, and sea level rise. An estimated 6,874
archaeological sites will be underwater with a 2 m (6.6 foot) rise in sea level
in Florida alone (Anderson et al. 2017). In response to this threat, the Florida
Public Archaeology Network launched Heritage
Monitoring Scouts (HMS Florida) in 2016, a citizen science
program focused on tracking changes to heritage sites at risk, particularly
those impacted by climate change in the form of erosion and sea level rise.
This report is a follow up to previous HMS reports from first
(2016-2017) and second
(2017-2018) years of the program. Over the course of HMS Florida's third year an
additional 168 new people applied to become Heritage Monitoring Scouts, agreed
to the ethics statement to do no harm to sites, and received 12 monthly updates
on training and resources. Scouts submitted 413 monitoring reports on 374 individual sites during the second year, bringing the overall total to 948 sites monitored as of July 31, 2019.
Program
Accomplishments 2018-2019
Monitoring Blitz!
The West Central/Central FPAN crew partnered up with the Division of Historical Resources, Bureau of Archaeological Research, and Department of Environmental Protection aquatic preserve staff to revisit sites within the Big Bend Aquatic Preserve. The Blitz aimed to monitor approximately 30 sites over a handful of days, many of which had not been visited by an archaeologist in decades. The Blitz provided a new model of partnership and pacing that many in FPAN hope to apply to sites to be visited during the 2019-2021 HMS Florida grant project.
The West Central/Central FPAN crew partnered up with the Division of Historical Resources, Bureau of Archaeological Research, and Department of Environmental Protection aquatic preserve staff to revisit sites within the Big Bend Aquatic Preserve. The Blitz aimed to monitor approximately 30 sites over a handful of days, many of which had not been visited by an archaeologist in decades. The Blitz provided a new model of partnership and pacing that many in FPAN hope to apply to sites to be visited during the 2019-2021 HMS Florida grant project.
Jeff Moates fills out a HMS Florida monitoring form during the Blitz. |
HMS Florida monitor retreats from site impacted from sea level rise. |
Tidally United Summit in
Sarasota
The third annual Tidally United: Cultural Resources
Shoreline Monitoring and Public Engagement Summit took place August 10-11, 2018 at New College and Payne Park Auditorium in Sarasota. Partners for the
summit included the Historic
Spanish Point, New College, Alliance
for Weedon Island Archaeological Research and Education (AWIARE), Time Sifters Archaeology Society, South
Florida Museum (now the Bishop Museum of
Science and Nature), Archaeological
Consultants, Inc., and Little
Greek. Highlights from the formal day of papers include Dr. Jessi Halligan’s
keynote “Drowned Deserts, Breached Beaches, and Sunken Springs,” planning and practice panel and perspective
case studies, highlights from HMS Florida around the state, launch of the
Coastal Heritage at Risk Taskforce, and elected official candidate forum.
Highlights from the 3rd annual Tidally United Summit. |
Thanks to Historic Spanish Point for hosting field day! |
For more information check
out the official website for the current year of Tidally
United and the archive of past summits listed on the
website.
Community Conversations on
Heritage at Risk
Inspired by workshops held
during the Learning
from Loss program sponsored by the Scottish Universities Insight
Institute through a grant submitted by Tom Dawson and Joanna Hambly at
University of St. Andrews,
three community workshops were held for the purpose of listening to the public
about coastal heritage concerns.
Emily Jane Murray (FPAN) and Allyson Ropp (LAMP) lead the community on a coastal walk. |
Members of the community continue to deliberate on coastal heritage in small and large group discussion. |
Continued evaluation of Community Engagement Levels
As a public engagement program, HMS Florida is evaluated not only by how many sites are visited each year, but in the context of frameworks including Rosenblatt's engagement pyramid model. Since the launch in August 2016, a conservative estimate of 70,000 people observe and follow the program measured by members of the EnvArch Facebook page, page views on the HMS Florida landing page, and media coverage (see 2018-2019 list below). A total of 629 Scouts have signed up for the program to date with 168 new applicants approved during HMS Florida's 3rd. Scouts stay active by submitting monitoring forms, with some scouts covering multiple sites over the course of the year. FPAN staff are currently leading the program, but several independent scouts are working up the pyramid by training others and leading monitoring events on their own. For the third year report, increase in FPAN staff activity is noted and rate of new scouts remains steady (199 last year, 168 this year).
Scout Activity Reports
- 168 applications received and
accepted, all have signed ethics statement
- Applicants from 34 counties in 85
different Florida communities, 1 out of state
- Scouts monitored 374 different sites during 2018-2019, cumulative total of 948 with 128 sites monitored in multiple years
- Data gaps -- 26 sites reported not
listed on the Florida Master Site File
- 32 Contributing Scouts (1+ site monitored)
- Scouts received 12 updates and challenges over the course of the year
Summary of Sites Monitored
The
majority of sites monitored HMS Florida continue to be those on state land,
followed by private, then federal, county, city, and a handful of unknown ownership. While the number of different sites monitored decreased
slightly from 438 last year to 374 this year, it is encouraging to see an
increase in previously monitored sites from 48 last year to 128 this year as
monitoring requires subsequent visits to record change to sites over time. For
2018-2019 the number of federal sites monitored increased. The number of
unknown ownership types decreased that suggests monitoring through Arches
portal has helped increased accuracy in reporting and maintaining consistent
records.
Looking
at sites monitored, 75% are archaeological sites. Monitored structures
decreased. With the pilot program to monitor structures from previous years and
integration of a structures form into Arches, so far the resources to integrate
structures into the program has not been widely successful. As HMS Florida is a
program of the Florida Public Archaeology Network, it stands to reason that
structures are not at the core mission of the organization and therefore
support to monitor structures is not in place. However, when FPAN staff held
evening monitoring opportunities for Scouts, there was little public interest
and several events canceled. Time will tell if land managers find the
structures monitoring feature useful in Arches, but in response to waning public
interest structural monitoring will not remain an emphasis in the program going
forward.
In
looking more closely at archaeological sites monitored, precolonial sites held
at a steady percentage of the sites monitored from previous years. A noted
increase was observed in shipwrecks monitored through HMS Florida, from 4
percent the first year and 6 percent the second year, to now 10 percent of
archaeological sites monitored. This increase suggests Submerged HMS programs
have been successful in increasing monitoring of underwater resources, which
resulted in FPAN merging the Submerged HMS program with the previous existing
SSEAS (part one) program.
Not
all of the statistics currently available for HMS Florida make sense. In
looking at sites monitored in terms of threat level and condition, it is not
clear HMS Florida is currently focusing on sites at the greatest risk. Several
factors complicate these statistics: variability in scout assessment of
condition and threats, transitioning from the easy to use beta form to the
Arches portal, and opportunistic monitoring versus prioritization strategies in
place. These represent the current growing pains of the HMS Florida program.
Good news: help is on the way. The Heritage Monitoring Scout program received
full funding from the Florida Department of State Division of Historical
Resources special category grant. The issue of prioritization will be a focus
on HMS Florida next year as good condition but high threat level sites have not
necessarily meant a site was a high priority as HMS Florida was developed. High
priority meant some change was happening to the site or it needed immediate
follow up, versus the site is a high priority to monitor. The difference may be
subtle, but graphs such as the one below demonstrate further refinement of
monitoring terms is needed and will be addressed next fiscal year.
Program
Reach and Coverage
In
HMS Florida's third year, we saw continued activity across the state in 49 counties. The first graph below shows the various ways the program is active, depending on where Scouts live, where they monitor, where training events occur, and where partner organizations are located. While some the program became active in several new counties (Glades, Gulf, Jefferson, Layfayette and Marion), activity also stopped in several that were active in the first two years of programming. The program has cumulatively never been active in Calhoun, DeSoto, Gadsden, Hardee, Highlands, Union, and Washington Counties. The following heat maps represent where all activities are taking place, where scouts live, and where scouts are monitoring.
Media Coverage
America Adapts Podcast: Keeping History Above Water - St. Augustine, Cultural Heritage, and Sea Level Rise (America Adapts Podcast)
Program Improvements
Heritage Emergency and Response Training
In December Sarah Miller
attended HEART training sponsored by the Smithsonian and FEMA. During the
training, she was inspired by the annual May Day exercise held by the
Smithsonian where they practice the Incident Command System and drill
responding to threats to archives and collections. In May 2019, FPAN Northeast
partnered with St. Johns County and the St. Augustine Archival Society to host the
first May Day exercise in Florida at Government House in St. Augustine.
Participants attended an introduction to ICS presentation and showed up May 1st
to be assigned a role on the Incident Command Team and evacuate a collection
threatened by a scenario written with assistance by Matt Armstrong and Mercedes Harrold.
Special
Category Grant Awarded 2019-2021
The Heritage Monitoring
Scout grant received full funding from the Florida Department of State Division
of Historical Resources. The project aims to monitor 500 sites at risk
throughout the state. The project also includes 3D scanning of a minimum of 12
sites to record baseline levels and demonstrate change over time measured using
digital data. A Program Manager and Database Manager will officially join the
HMS Florida team. Due to reporting requirements from the state, the annual
reporting year for HMS Florida will shift from August 1-July 30th to
July 1-June 30th starting next year.
Database
Updates
Updates to the Arches management system, developed by the
Getty Conservation Institute and World Monuments Fund, continued for a third
year. Major improvements include migration of all the beta form data into
Arches and improved work flow for Scouts. Thanks to Paulette MacFadden at BAR
the ARM training now features an Arches training session to improve accessibility
for land managers, which has also helped to standardize training on the new system
for other users. We continue to work with developer Adam Cox at Legion GIS on updates and
improvements and hope to take advantages of the Arches app set to launch in
fall 2019. Data from monitoring forms demonstrate the migration from google
based forms to Arches is a success and a diversity of volunteers, land
managers, and FPAN staff are able to log on and use the system to document
their visits.
HMS Florida Partners by
County
ALACHUA
University of Florida
Florida Museum of Natural
History
University of Florida - IFAS
Camp Helen State Park
Gulf Coast State College
St. Andrews State Park
BREVARD
Florida Solar Energy Center
Sams House at Pine Island
Preserve
Space Coast Science
Education Alliance
BROWARD
Native Learning Center
CHARLOTTE
Charlotte County History
Center
Charlotte County
Environmental Center
Charlotte Harbor Aquatic
Preserves
CITRUS
Gulf Archaeology Research
Institute
Crystal River State Park
Big Bend Seagrasses Aquatic
Preserve
St. Martin’s Marsh Aquatic
Preserve
CLAY
Clay County Archives
COLLIER
Conservation Collier
Rookery Bay NERR
DADE
Florida International
University
History Miami
DUVAL
University of North Florida
North Florida Land Trust
ESCAMBIA
Destination Archaeology
Resource Center
Goat Lips Chew and Brewhouse
University of West Florida
Big Lagoon State Park
Tarkiln Bayou Preserve State
Park
FLAGLER
Bings Landing County Park
Marineland Dolphin
Adventures
River to Sea Preserve
Fort Matanzas National
Monument
Washington Oaks Garden State
Park
FRANKLIN
Apalachicola National
Estuary Research Reserve
HENDRY
Ah-Tah-Thi-Ki Seminole
Indian Museum
Seminole Tribe of Florida
Tribal Historic Preservation Office
HILLSBOROUGH
University of South Florida
LAKE
Trout Lake Nature Preserve
LEE
Randell Research Center
Cape Coral Library
Koreshan State Historic Site
South County Regional
Library
Mound House
IMAG History and Science
Center
MANATEE
Emerson Point Preserve
Manatee County Parks and
Recreation
Time Sifters Archaeological
Society
MARTIN
Gilbert’s Bar and House of
Refuge
NASSAU
Amelia Island Museum of
History
City of Fernandina Beach
Fort Clinch State Park
IFAS Nassau Extension Office
Friends of Bosque Bello
Cemetery
SCUBA Station
OKALOOSA
City of Mary Ester
Mary Ester Public Library
ORANGE
University of Central
Florida, Department of Anthropology
PALM
BEACH
Florida Atlantic University
PINELLAS
Central Gulf Coast
Archaeological Society
Weeden Island Preserve
Cultural and Natural History Center
PUTNAM
Log Cabin Winery
Historic Melrose, Inc
Town of Welaka
Dunns Creek State Park
SANTA
ROSA
City of Gulf Breeze
Navarre Public Library
Escribano Point Wildlife
Management Area
SARASOTA
New College
ST.
JOHNS
Flagler College
Flagler College Archaeology
Club
GTM Research Reserve
Guana River Wildlife
Management Area
Historic Tours of America
Northeast Florida Aquatic
Preserves
St. Augustine Archaeological
Association
St Johns County
Environmental Division
St. Johns County Public
Library
St. Augustine Lighthouse and
Maritime Museum
St. Augustine Distillery
St. Augustine Archaeological
Association
Favor Dykes State Park
ST.
LUCIE
Richard E. Becker Preserve
St. Lucie Parks and
Recreation
VOLUSIA
New Smyrna Museum of History
Town of Ponce Inlet
Ormond Beach Environmental
Discovery Center
Tomoka Basin State Parks
Canaveral National Seashore
WALTON
Eden Gardens State Park
STATEWIDE/NATIONAL
Environmental Remediation
and Recovery, Inc.
Florida Archaeological
Council
Florida Anthropological Society
Florida Coastal Office
Florida Department of
Historical Resources
Florida Trust for Historic
Preservation
Florida Master Naturalist
Program
National Park Service
National Oceanographic and
Atmospheric Association
INTERNATIONAL
SCAPE
CHERISH
CITiZAN
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
HMS Florida would not be
possible without the hard work of all FPAN staff across the state: William
Lees, Della Scott-Ireton, Mike Thomin, Barbara Clark, Nicole Grinnan, Tristan
Harrenstein, Jeff Moates, Kassie Kemp, Nigel Rudolph, Rachael Kangas, Sara
Ayers-Rigsby, Mal Fenn, Emma Dietrich, and Robbie Boggs. Kevin Gidusko and
Brittany Yabczanka have moved on from FPAN but we sincerely thank them for
their efforts to establish HMS Florida and creativity they brought to the
team.
We also want to thank the
Bureau of Archaeological Research in Florida's Division of Historical Resources
staff who were again instrumental to the success of the program: State
Archaeologist Mary Glowacki, Paulette McFadden, Josh Goodwin, and Ryan Duggins;
Vincent Birdsong at Florida Master Site File; David Morgan and Margo Schwadron
at Southeast Archaeological Center (NPS). Julia Duggins has moved on to
Paleo West but during her time at the state made a substantial contribution to
the growth of HMS Florida. And special thanks to William Stanton and
Florida State Parks for fostering site stewardsip opportunities for Scouts and
land managers.
And all of HMS Florida
volunteers currently monitoring heritage sites in Florida.
Works Cited
Anderson DG, Bissett TG,
Yerka SJ, Wells JJ, Kansa EC, Kansa SW, et al. (2017) Sea-level rise and
archaeological site destruction: An example from the southeastern United States
using DINAA (Digital Index of North American Archaeology). PLoS ONE 12(11):
e0188142. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0188142
2016-2017 annual report for
HMS Florida available here.
2017-2018 annual report for available here.
Text and images: Sarah Miller and Emily Jane Murray, FPAN staff except where noted.
Based on "HMS Florida Year
in Review, 2018-2019," paper presented by Sarah E. Miller and Emily Jane Murray at Tidally
United August 16, 2019, Pensacola, Florida.