Trust and method
Method / Evidence Policy
LUX Light Archive is built for source-backed lighthouse heritage, not for volume alone. A record is useful only when readers can understand what is known, where it came from, and where uncertainty remains.
The archive is part of LUX143 and uses stable LUX identifiers, evidence-aware records, visual authenticity labels, and publication gates to keep interpretation separate from proof.
What this archive preserves
The archive documents lighthouses, lightships, optics, lighthouse keepers, navigation signals, lost lights, and movable heritage assets as cultural and technical memory. A lighthouse may survive as a tower, a light, a lens, a route, a document, a photograph, a museum object, a disputed coordinate, or a story.
Public records are therefore treated as continuity records: they can describe present state, historical state, movement, loss, reuse, restoration, and memory without pretending that all evidence has the same certainty.
What counts as evidence
Sources are kept as provenance. Official navigation lists, heritage registers, archival catalogues, museum records, books, owner/operator pages, maps, field observations, and trusted lighthouse catalogues can all support different kinds of claims.
External identifiers such as Admiralty, NGA, ARLHS, Wikidata, OpenStreetMap, and heritage-register IDs are treated as provenance links and alignment aids. They do not replace the stable LUX identity of a record.
Where possible, facts are connected to source status, review status, confidence, and the period of time the claim describes.
How claims are reviewed
The archive separates inherited source material from reviewed interpretation. Legacy pages, imported rows, external identifiers, and local review overlays are preserved as lineage; accepted public facts are promoted only when their evidence is sufficient for the claim being made.
A source may be strong for one fact and weak for another. For example, a current navigation list may support a light characteristic, while an archival publication may be stronger for an earlier apparatus, keeper history, or lost location.
This is why small changes can matter. A different flash pattern, a tower moved to a museum, or a lens attributed to a maker becomes heritage evidence only when it is tied to the right object, time period, source, and confidence level.
The public site exposes only a publish-ready subset. Records or pages with unresolved review findings can remain reachable but are quarantined from indexing until the issue is addressed.
How uncertainty is shown
Unknown, approximate, disputed, inherited, translated, interpretative, and not-yet-reviewed states are shown rather than hidden. This is part of the trust model: a careful archive should make uncertainty readable instead of converting it into false precision.
Coordinates, names, dates, status, visual material, and lifecycle events may therefore carry explicit context. A record can be useful even when it is incomplete, provided the limits of the evidence are clear.
Visual authenticity and AI
Public visuals distinguish documentary photographs, archival images, maps, drawings, restricted references, placeholders, intentionally omitted images, and AI-assisted illustrations.
AI may assist interpretation, but it does not replace evidence. AI-assisted images are labelled as interpretative and must not be described as documentary photographs, historical proof, or source evidence.
Images without adequate rights or attribution are kept out of public visual slots until reviewed. Restricted visual references may remain as metadata without public image display.
Lifecycle continuity
The archive records change over time: construction, rebuilding, automation, decommissioning, destruction, relocation, restoration, museum transfer, reuse, and memory. Movable assets such as lenses and lanterns are treated as heritage objects in their own right, not only as notes on tower records.
This continuity model is especially important for Lost Lights, lightships, optics, and places where the original tower no longer exists but the light, apparatus, documentation, or cultural memory survives.
Responsible reuse
Use LUX records with their context: cite the archive page, keep source/provenance links visible, and do not treat interpretative text or AI-assisted visuals as documentary proof. When a record shows uncertainty, preserve that uncertainty in reuse.
For export and reuse guidance, see Data / Reuse. For source context, start with the public Sources section and the provenance shown on individual records. For the project frame, see About LUX Light Archive.
Trust principle
LUX Light Archive does not claim that every inherited record is complete. It claims a method: preserve lineage, separate evidence from interpretation, mark uncertainty, and publish only what can be responsibly shown.
The light is not the lighthouse. It is what survives the lighthouse.