Federal Register Notice,
June 11, 1997; 62(112):31713-31721
Archaeological and Ethnological
Material From Peru
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Customs Service
19 CFR Part 12
[T.D. 97-50]
RIN 1515-AC17
Archaeological and
Ethnological Material From Peru
AGENCY: U.S. Customs
Service, Department of the Treasury.
ACTION: Final rule.
SUMMARY: This document
amends the Customs Regulations to reflect the imposition of import restrictions
on certain archaeological material of Peru's pre-Columbian past dating to
the Colonial period and certain Colonial ethnological materials of Peru.
These restrictions are being imposed pursuant to an agreement between the
United States and Peru which has been entered into under the authority of
the Convention on Cultural Property Implementation Act in accordance with
the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)
Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import,
Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property. The document also
contains the Designated List of Archaeological and Ethnological Material
which describes the articles to which the restrictions apply. This document
also amends the Customs Regulations by removing the listing of Peru and
identification of the cultural property to which emergency import restrictions
have been imposed. Articles which had been protected under that provision
are also covered under the new listing.
EFFECTIVE DATE: June
11, 1997.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT: Legal Aspects: Donnette Rimmer, Intellectual Property Rights
Branch (202) 482-6960. Operational Aspects: Louis Alfano, Commercial Enforcement,
Office of Field Operations (202) 927-0005.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The value of cultural
property, whether archaeological or ethnological in nature, is immeasurable.
Such items often constitute the very essence of a society and convey important
information concerning a people's origin, history, and traditional setting.
The importance and popularity of such items regrettably makes them targets
of theft, encourages clandestine looting of archaeological sites, and
results in their illegal export and import.
The U.S. shares in the
international concern for the need to protect endangered cultural property.
The appearance in the U.S. of stolen or illegally exported artifacts from
other countries where there has been pillage has, on occasion, strained
our foreign and cultural relations. This situation, combined with the
concerns of museum, archaeological, and scholarly communities, was recognized
by the President and Congress. It became apparent that it was in the national
interest for the U.S. to join with other countries to control illegal
trafficking of such articles in international commerce.
The U.S. joined international
efforts and actively participated in deliberations resulting in the 1970
UNESCO Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit
Import, Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property (823 U.N.T.S.
231 (1972)). U.S. acceptance of the 1970 UNESCO Convention was codified
into U.S. law as the "Convention on Cultural Property Implementation Act"
(Pub.L. 97- 446, 19 U.S.C. 2601 et seq.) ("the Act"). This was done to
promote U.S. leadership in achieving greater international cooperation
towards preserving cultural treasures that are of importance not only
to the nations whence they originate, but also to greater international
understanding of mankind's common heritage. The U.S. is, to date, the
only major art importing country to implement the 1970 Convention.
During the past several
years, import restrictions have been imposed on a emergency basis on archaeological
and ethnological artifacts of a number of signatory nations as a result
of requests for protection received from those nations.
Peru has been one of
the countries whose archaeological material has been afforded emergency
protections. In T.D. 90-37, Sec. 12.104g(b), Customs Regulations, was
amended to reflect that archaeological material from the Sipan Archaeological
Region forming part of the remains of the Moche culture received import
protection under the emergency protection provisions of the Act. This
protection was extended in T.D. 94-54. Import restrictions are now being
imposed on certain pre-Columbian archaeological materials of Peru dating
to the Colonial period and certain Colonial ethnological material from
Peru as the result of a bilateral agreement entered into between the United
States and Peru. This agreement was entered into on June 9, 1997, pursuant
to the provisions of 19 U.S.C. 2602. Protection of the archaeological
material from the Sipan region previously reflected in Sec. 12.104g(b)
will be continued through the bilateral agreement without interruption.
Accordingly, Sec. 12.104g(a) of the Customs Regulations is being amended
to indicate that restrictions have been imposed pursuant to the agreement
between the United States and Peru and the emergency import restrictions
on certain archaeological material from Peru is being removed from Sec.
12.104g(b) as those restrictions are now encompassed in Sec. 12.104g(a).
This document contains
the Designated List of Archaeological and Ethnological Material representing
the cultures of the native peoples of Peru which are covered by the agreement.
Importation of articles on this list is restricted unless the articles
are accompanied by an appropriate export certificate issued by the Government
of Peru.
In reaching the decision
to recommend extension of protection, the Deputy Director, United States
Information Agency, determined that, pursuant to the requirements of the
Act, with respect to categories of pre-Columbian archaeological material
proposed by the Government of Peru for U.S. import restrictions, ranging
in date from approximately 12,000 B.C. to A.D. 1532, and including, but
not limited to, objects comprised of textiles, metals, ceramics, lithics,
perishable remains, and human remains that represent cultures that include,
but are not limited to, the Chavin, Paracas, Vincus, Moche (including
objects derived from the archaeological zone of Sipan), Viru, Lima, Nazca,
Recuay, Tiahuanaco, Huari, Chimu, Chancay, Cuzco, and Inca; that the cultural
patrimony of Peru is in jeopardy from the pillage of these irreplaceable
materials representing pre-Columbian heritage; and that with respect to
certain categories of ethnological material of the Colonial period, ranging
in date from A.D. 1532 to 1821, proposed by the Government of Peru for
U.S. import restrictions but limited to (1) objects directly related to
the pre-Columbian past, whose pre-Columbian design and function are maintained
with some Colonial characteristics and may include textiles, metal objects,
and ceremonial wood, ceramic and stone vessels; and (2) objects used for
religious evangelism among indigenous peoples and including Colonial paintings
and sculpture with distinct indigenous iconography; that the cultural
patrimony of Peru is in jeopardy of pillage of these irreplaceable materials
as documented by the request.
List of Designated
Archaeological and Ethnological Material From Peru
Pursuant to a Memorandum
of Understanding between the United States and the Republic of Peru, the
following contains descriptions of the cultural materials for which the
United States imposes import restrictions under the Convention on Cultural
Property Implementation Act (Pub. L. 97-446), the legislation enabling
implementation of the 1970 UNESCO Convention on the Means of Prohibiting
and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of Ownership of
Cultural Property.
The Designated List
includes archaeological materials known to originate in Peru, ranging
in date from approximately 12,000 B.C. to A.D. 1532, and including, but
not limited to, objects comprised of textiles, metals, ceramics, lithics,
perishable remains, and human remains that represent cultures that include,
but are not limited to, the Chavin, Paracas, Vicus, Moche, Viru, Lima,
Nazca, Recuay, Tiahuanaco, Huari, Chimu, Chancay, Cuzco, and Inca cultures.
The Designated List also includes certain categories of ethnological materials
from Peru dating to the Colonial period (A.D. 1532-1821), limited to:
(1) objects directly related to the pre-Columbian past, whose pre-Columbian
design and function are maintained with some Colonial characteristics
and may include textiles, metal objects, and ceremonial wood, ceramic
and stone vessels; and (2) objects used for religious evangelism among
indigenous peoples and including Colonial paintings and sculpture with
distinct indigenous iconography. The Designated List below also subsumes
those categories of Moche objects from the Sipan Archaeological Region
of Peru for which emergency import restrictions have been in place since
1990. With publication of the Designated List below, protection of the
Sipan material continues without interruption.
The list is divided
into seven categories of objects:
I.
II.
III.
IV.
V.
VI.
VII. |
Pre-Columbian
Textiles
Pre-Columbian Metals
Pre-Columbian Ceramics
Pre-Columbian Lithics
Pre-Columbian Perishable
Remains
Pre-Columbian Human
Remains
Ethnological Objects
A. Objects Directly
Related to the Pre-Columbian Past
B. Objects Used for Religious
Evangelism Among Indigenous Peoples |
| What follows
immediately is a chart of chronological periods and cultural classifications
currently widely used for identifying archaeological remains in Peru.
All dates are approximate. |
|
Rowe |
Lumbreras |
1440-1532
A.D.
1100-1440 A.D.
600-1100 A.D.
200 B.C.-600 A.D.
1000-200 B.C.
1700-1000 B.C.
2500-1800 B.C.
4500-2500 B.C.
6000-4500 B.C.
12000-6000 B.C. |
Late
Horizon
Late Intermediate
Period
Middle Horizon
Early Intermediate
Period
Early Horizon
Initial Period
Late Pre-ceramic
Middle Pre-ceramic
Early Pre-ceramic
|
Inca
Empire.
Regional states
and kingdoms.
Huari Empire.
Regional Cultures.
Middle and Late
Formative.
Early Formative
Late Archaic.
Middle Archaic.
Early Archaic.
Hunter-Gatherers. |
The following Designated
List is representational and may be amended as appropriate.
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