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Makah one step closer to hunting whales: Animal rights extremists continue to oppose it

After 25 years of legal maneuvering, the Makah are now one year away from resuming a tradition central to their culture and identity, the hunting of gray whales. The long, public battle involving hearings and lawsuits, false starts and conflicts that regularly appeared in headlines since 1994, will finally be over. But what most people won’t see is how it began decades before with a winter storm.

In February 1970, a fierce storm pummeled the northwestern tip of Washington state. Wind and rain scoured a small coastal area about ten miles south of Neah Bay near Ozette Lake. Six Makah longhouses previously buried for hundreds of years appeared on the surface.

Ed Claplanhoo, a Makah tribal elder, contacted an archeologist from Washington State University named Richard Daugherty, who had previously surveyed the site. Daugherty came and examined the remains of the longhouses and realized that, although collapsed, they were almost perfectly preserved. A massive mudslide hundreds of years before had covered them, preventing deterioration. The longhouses and the artifacts they contained became known as “the Pompeii of America.”

For the next 11 years, Daugherty and other archeologists, as well as students from the Makah tribe, painstakingly excavated the site, carefully unearthing and cataloging 55,000 artifacts. Many were made of whalebone or were in some way related to whaling. This verified what anthropologists long suspected and what the tribe knew for a certainty. The Makah were primarily whaling people.

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Indian Country Today

Student to intern at congressional, senatorial level

Emma R. Johnson.
Emma Johnson

Emma R. Johnson is the first WSU student to become a Udall Native American Congressional intern and has also been selected to become an intern for Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto (D-NV).

Johnson, a senior majoring in cultural anthropology, is also a member of the Cowlitz Indian tribe, said she began the Udall application process in October 2018 and submitted it in January 2019.

Johnson said the Udall Foundation awards scholarships according to three different categories: environmental, tribal policy and Native American healthcare.

As a scholarship winner, Johnson was required to attend a four-day conference with other Udall scholars. During the conference, Johnson learned about congressional internships.

After being chosen as one of the finalists, the Udall Foundation and Sen. Cortez Masto’s staff interviewed Johnson, she said.

She said Sen. Cortez Masto is on the U.S. Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, as well as the U.S. Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, which are two of Johnson’s interests.

Johnson said she will be working in Sen. Cortez Masto’s office, and her responsibilities as an intern will include giving tours of the capital and speaking with constituents.

“I’ll be given portfolios on Indian Affairs and Energy and Natural Resources, so I can work with what I’m interested in,” she said. “I will also get the bigger picture of everything that goes on in her office.”

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WSU Insider
Daily Evergreen

 

A Battle is Being Waged to Save Bears Ears, Chaco Canyon National Parks

During his tenure, Barack Obama gave roughly 553 million acres of land national protection (more than even famed conservationist Theodore Roosevelt) by establishing or adding to 29 national monuments, signaling an unprecedented commitment to protecting culturally and historically significant American land.

However, since his election, conservationists have worried Donald Trump and his administration were going to greatly reduce the amount of sacred, tribal land protected under federal law.

William Lipe.
Lipe

“If the Trump administration’s effort to dramatically reduce the size of the Bears Ears National Monument survives challenges in federal courts, it would represent a very large change in application of the 1906 Antiquities Act – because it would be an unprecedented reduction by executive action of a monument proclaimed by a previous president. This might also encourage future executive assaults on other laws that have been used to protect cultural and environmental resources on the federal public lands,” said Dr. William D. Lipe, archaeologist and Professor Emeritus at Washington State University.

One of the biggest blows the administration has dealt to the indigenous nations of the southwestern United States is the 2017 proclamation that reduced the size of Bears Ears National Monument to a mere 15 percent of its former size.

Trump’s administration used the Antiquities Act to justify his proclamation, a move that many have contended is illegal under federal law. The Antiquities Act was signed into law by Theodore Roosevelt in 1906 and gave the federal government the power to create national monuments from public lands.

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CitizenTruth

Oldest tattoo tool in western North America discovered

Washington State University archaeologists have discovered the oldest tattooing artifact in western North America.

Andrew Gillreath-Brown.Andrew Gillreath‑Brown, an anthropology PhD candidate, chanced upon the pen‑sized instrument while taking an inventory of archaeological materials that had been sitting in storage for more than 40 years.

With a handle of skunkbush and a cactus‑spine business end, the tool was made around 2,000 years ago by the Ancestral Pueblo people of the Basketmaker II period in what is now southeastern Utah.

“Tattooing by prehistoric people in the Southwest is not talked about much because there has not ever been any direct evidence to substantiate it,” Gillreath‑Brown said. “This tattoo tool provides us information about past Southwestern culture we did not know before.”

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High Country News

CAS undergraduate receives Sigma Xi research grant

AnnMarie McCracken, an undergraduate student at Washington State University, has been awarded a research grant from Sigma Xi, the scientific research honor society’s Grants‑in‑Aid of Research program.

Only 12 percent of the 810 grant applications in 2018 were approved for funding, and only 17 of the approved proposals were from undergraduates.

McCracken is pursuing a double bachelor’s degree with majors in French and in anthropology.

She will receive an $847 grant from the Sigma Xi program’s ecology category for her project “An Isotopic Examination of Dietary Niche Partitioning Between Lynx and Bobcats in a Range Edge Environment.”

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