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Montana's Kennewick Child

The battle lines are being drawn again by archaeologists and Native Americans over the re-interment of America’s oldest burial, a one and a half year-old boy who was laid to rest 13,000 years ago accompanied by the largest and most spectacular collection of Clovis burial artifacts ever discovered (also known as the Anzick Site). Tribal members in Montana and elsewhere want the child re-buried with reverence and ceremony while invested scientists want to keep on studying the human remains using DNA and Radiocarbon testing—techniques which destroy samples of what’s left of the child’s bones.

During the nasty legal squabble over Kennewick Man (a 9,000-year-old skeleton found in the Columbia River in 1996), we were reminded that archaeology lingers yet as a barely disguised insult to many Native Americans. The maneuvering and sequestering behind the discovery of Kennewick Man was a media circus fed by assertions of white supremacists that the Aryan race discovered America. Whatever the intent of the anthropologists, the result was increasing polarization between the scientists and the local Umatilla people.

The central issue of Kennewick Man was his ancestry: Was he of European origin? Some anthropologists thought he looked like a Caucasian actor from Star Trek. Why should Native Americans care about where he came from or from whom? To explain the Native American position, one California professor wrote this condescending note:

“…for the present system of incentives and rewards in which they operate depends on the constant assertion of Indian victimhood and white guilt. Such assertions would not be helped if it turned out the Indians weren’t the first Americans after all; that Europeans may have been here before them; or that Indians, like the Europeans who followed, may have come to America as colonizers to find a racially different aboriginal population, which they eventually replaced. For them it is better that as little as possible be known about Kennewick Man, or about any other ancient skeletal material for that matter.”

The Kennewick Man controversy, with white male scientists lined up on one side and Indians on the other, quickly grew ugly.

In Montana, however, the Clovis child’s ancestry is now clear: the boy’s people came from Siberia and his family is ancestral to 70 percent of all Native North and South Americans. He is America’s First Child. Clovis people no doubt came down from Alaska through the ice-free corridor between the two North American ice sheets and the origins of Clovis technology probable arise in Montana somewhere south of the Missouri River. All these claims can be verified by material found in the child’s burial.

A formal paper will soon be released in the scientific publication Nature. We know the genetic details from the recently released DNA results of the child’s skeletal remains. This is a very big archaeological deal, perhaps the biggest news so far in North American archaeology.

Thus the popular Solutrean theory, whereby Europeans from Spain and France paddled across the Atlantic Ocean to introduce Clovis technology to America, is dead. Clovis people were among the first wave of Americans who came over from Asia. The science so sacred to archaeologist has been completed; we have radiocarbon dates and DNA studies from the First Child’s skeletal remains and burial goods. It’s time for repatriation. Now, only the reburial of the bones remains.

Sadly, but predictably, the authors of this soon-to-be-published paper state are against reburial. Here is their statement as of November 1, 2013:

"The Anzick burial site was discovered on private land and the remains recovered have not been in control of a federally funded museum or federal agency, and thus the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) does not apply. Under Montana state law, unmarked human burials are not considered abandoned. Advice provided to the project by members of the Montana State Burial Board, however, confirmed that since no claimant has been made a request for the remains, the human remains from the Anzick burial site remain under the control of the landowners, the Anzick family."

In other words, the lead archaeologist considers the child’s skeletal remains the “private property” of the landowners, so he can go test the bones (DNA analysis is a particularly destructive process). The authors’ claims of informing Native American groups of their work are at least disingenuous.

An enrolled member of the Crow Tribe, an instructor at Montana State University in Bozeman, has recently presented the idea of reburial to Montana’s Tribal Historic Preservation Officers in Helena. Nothing was resolved as to how, when of even if the First Child would be repatriated.

I would point out that Montana’s Native Americans have no more claim to the Anzick child skeletal remains and grave offerings than do other tribes throughout North and South America, from New York to Baja, from the Alaskan Coast to Florida and all through South and Central America. The First Child’s people are Grandfather and Grandmother to all.

If you or your friends are Native Americans, the odds are that the Anzick child is your ancestor. Please call the Montana State Burial Preservation Board and ask to become a claimant to the child’s remains.

Montana State Burial Preservation Board phone: (406) 444-2460

For more about the history of the Anzick site, see In the Shadow of the Sabertooth: A Renegade Naturalist Considers Global Warming, the First Americans and the Terrible Beasts of the Pleistocene (AK Press, 2013).

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Protecting Wolves

I encourage anyone with the ability and inclination to join these courageous defenders of wolves on September 7th.


In less than six weeks the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will shut down the public comment period on its plan to strip federal protection from virtually all of America's wolves. The furry wild ones need all the help we can give them.

http://rallyforwolves.org/

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Defaming Ajo

b2ap3_thumbnail_saguaro-cabeza.JPGIn Ajo, Ariz., Deputies Outnumbered by Drugs and Bodies

"In a remote Arizona town about 40 miles from the Mexican border, the local sheriff’s deputies act as the tip of the sword as national drug and immigration policies meet desperation in a brutal desert."

This is perhaps the worst NYT article I have ever read, in terms of journalistic accuracy and ambient fairness. The non-governmental residents of Ajo are richly diverse in heritage and surprising astute about the astounding beauty and natural history of this unique stretch of Sonoran Desert; these people didn't come to this remote place for the golf. Except for the speeding Border Patrol vehicles and trigger-happy Pima County Sheriff trainee deputies, it is one of the safest places I have ever lived. Those sheriff deputies (most of whom will be gone in six months) the journalist interviewed are not Ajo's brightest bulbs. The NYT should not worry about getting their "Ajo" facts correct. They shouldn't even try. Maybe NYT's journalists should not even cross the Mississippi River; it's too strange out there in the quaint West.

Doug Peacock, Bunghole, MT

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Respect for the Dead

b2ap3_thumbnail_foreshaft-treo-2.jpgMy book, In the Shadow of the Sabertooth, was released last week, and among the many modern controversies it raises is the issue of repatriation of our oldest Native American burial.

In brief, in 1968, just north of the Yellowstone River, workers unearthed about 110 stone and bone artifacts that accompanied a child's burial. The funeral offerings were consecrated with sacred red ochre. These grave offerings constitute the Anzick Burial Site, the largest and most spectacular collection of Clovis tools ever found (the Clovis culture dates about 13,000 years ago). The one and a half year-old child is the oldest skeleton ever found in the Americas and the only known Clovis burial.

In the last decade, archaeologists from all over the world have jetted up to Montana for a piece of the child’s skeleton, which they ship to Denmark for DNA analysis or Colorado (or elsewhere) for carbon-14 dating.

The archaeologists, none of whom have ever contacted a Native American community, contend that the bones are privately owned by the landowner and not subject to Native American Graves and Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) laws. When asked, one says: “To date, we are unaware of claims of affiliation or requests for repatriation made by any Native American group in the 37 years since the Anzick site was discovered.” These same exact tired words have been repeated many times in the past 15 years.

I should mention that the daughter of the landowner and myself have separately tried to contact tribal members of the Cheyenne and Crow nations in the past decade but never heard back.

And how should any Native American group even know of that Clovis find? This site was unnoticed until Outside magazine wrote up re-excavation efforts in 2000. 1968 seems a long time ago. Now, the site is an apparent archaeological gold mine. The child’s story lives on, but it’s time he found an earthly home. This is a matter of simple respect. It's everyone's business.

Please pass this notice on to any Native American who would like to see the child’s remains repatriated.

Download an open letter to share (pdf)
History and details (pdf)
Blog post Respect for the Dead (pdf)

Read The Voices of Bones by Doug Peacock, Outside, February 2000

Learn more about Archeology and Ethics

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Save the the Wolverine: Montana's Polar Bear

These huge weasels are on my mind as this is the season they undulate over the spring snow pack looking to get laid. Bushwhack out of Many Glacier if you want to see one; there's only about 250 left south of Canada.

People who have spent a great deal of time with grizzly bears in the wild sometimes think they glimpse a flash of recognition, a sentience, in the eye of a wild bear, that some understanding passes between them. I have been guilty of such impressions—or illusions. For those of us who have been lucky enough to catch sight of a wolverine close up, the thought of any human brotherhood with that totally feral face never comes up. This is a creature too wild; the gigantic Mustelidae lives far beyond our wildest anthropomorphic dream.

May 6 was the deadline for comments to the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service for listing the wolverine in the lower 48 under the ESA. I posted of course, though I am deeply skeptical of this agency's cognitive flexibility--pissing in the wind awaiting the caddis hatch. The "little bear" is totally dependent on lingering spring snow, which will shrink back each year from the fickle ferocity of global warming.

The most credible scientific data on wolverines documents an absolute habitat dependence on “persistent spring snow habitat.” A study of 562 wolverine denning sites in Fennoscandia (like Sibelius caught with his pants down) and North America demonstrates that wolverines denned in areas of spring snow 100 percent of the time—all of the time. Persistent spring snow habitat has been defined as the snow that lingers from April 24 to May 15, a period that encompasses the end of the wolverine’s denning period. This data comes from satellite images and telemetry sites. During summers, 95 percent of telemetry locations of wolverines during summertime were in areas of persistent snow and 86 percent of winter locations also fell in these habitats. This study (Copeland, 2010) records satellite photographs from 2000 to 2006. The proxy of persistent spring snow for critical wolverine habitat is as close to a perfect wildlife management tool that we have for any large mammal in the Continental United States.

The only thing anyone, including feds, can do for the wolverine is stop killing them. Most wolverines die in traps, especially traps set for wolves. Since MTFWP refuses to budge on any restriction of trapping whatsoever--it's like freedom, god & guns--it's time for everyday folk to get involved. Consider putting a ban on trapping on the ballot. Let's see how everyone feels.

Download Doug's wolverine comments to the USFWS (wolverine_FWS.docx)

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