Difference between revisions of "Talk:Main Page"

From Department of Planning
Jump to: navigation, search
(Underwater Cultural Heritage)
Line 7: Line 7:
 
[[Underwater Cultural Heritage]]
 
[[Underwater Cultural Heritage]]
  
BalticRIM definition (Laura Seesmeri 2018)
+
BalticRIM definition (Laura Seesmeri 2018):
  
 
The underwater landscape is an area under the surface of the water and the way people directly or indirectly perceive and imagine it. Its features are the results of the interaction between people and nature, reflecting various dimensions of time.  
 
The underwater landscape is an area under the surface of the water and the way people directly or indirectly perceive and imagine it. Its features are the results of the interaction between people and nature, reflecting various dimensions of time.  

Revision as of 11:24, 9 July 2019

Maritime Cultural Heritage

Maritime Cultural Heritage

Underwater Cultural Heritage

Underwater Cultural Heritage

BalticRIM definition (Laura Seesmeri 2018):

The underwater landscape is an area under the surface of the water and the way people directly or indirectly perceive and imagine it. Its features are the results of the interaction between people and nature, reflecting various dimensions of time.

The underwater landscape discloses the connection people have with the sea. It is part of the environment that is perceived, imagined and lived either directly or indirectly by means of various acts, senses and associations.

The underwater landscape consists of environmental and natural elements, flora and fauna, traces left by human activity, such as wrecks, marine battlefields, waterways, harbours, maritime industry, and general traces of the history of settlement and the practising religion.

The underwater landscape is the shapes of the sea bed, the elements of the landscape at the bottom, the features of intermediate water, the light reflected from the water surface as well as traces of human life and maritime cultural heritage, which is either partly or fully under the surface of the water.

Understanding underwater landscapes gives a wide perspective to the connection between people and the sea, the confluence of the past and present, and the assessment of environmental changes and sustainable development by taking natural, cultural and social aspects of landscape into account.

Maritime Spatial Planning

Maritime Spatial Planning

Main categories of the archaeological heritage

According to the "A Guide to the Arhaelogical Heritage" (in Finland)the main categories of the archaeologiac heritage are:

Settlement (permanent and seasonal)

Stone age settlement site


Burial

Livelihoods

Fishing site

Fishing structure

Shipbuilding site

Industry

Traffic and information

Wreck

Ballast scraping site

Historical harbour

Landing place

Ship graveyard area/A ship scraping area

Ship-trap area

Religion

Defence and warfare

Naval battle site

Defence structure

Other

Maritime recycling area

Place with a historical narrative