“…An archaeology without time limits, multitemporal, participatory and public, political, creative, with its own rhetoric, which claims materiality on an equal ground among other sciences, also has a global and essentially theoretical characteristic: these are some of the critical elements for making the discipline more scientifically and socially relevant (González-Ruibal, 2012). In the same way that there are different engagements of archaeology with the present, not only are there are several pasts that different archaeologies produce, but several possible futures (Harrison, Cabral, 2019). In this way, heritage can be understood as practices that create futures (Harrison, Desilvey, et al, 2020).…”