Notice of Inventory Completion: West Virginia Division of Culture and History, Charleston, WV, 14498-14499 [2018-06832]
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 65 / Wednesday, April 4, 2018 / Notices
part of the death rite or ceremony and
are believed, by a preponderance of the
evidence, to have been removed from a
specific burial site of a Native American
individual.
• Pursuant to 25 U.S.C. 3001(2), there
is a relationship of shared group
identity that can be reasonably traced
between the unassociated funerary
objects and the Hopi Tribe of Arizona;
Kewa Pueblo, New Mexico (previously
listed as the Pueblo of Santo Domingo);
Ohkay Owingeh, New Mexico
(previously listed as the Pueblo of San
Juan); Pueblo of Acoma, New Mexico;
Pueblo of Cochiti, New Mexico; Pueblo
of Isleta, New Mexico; Pueblo of Jemez,
New Mexico; Pueblo of Laguna, New
Mexico; Pueblo of Nambe, New Mexico;
Pueblo of Picuris, New Mexico; Pueblo
of Pojoaque, New Mexico; Pueblo of San
Felipe, New Mexico; Pueblo of San
Ildefonso, New Mexico; Pueblo of
Sandia, New Mexico; Pueblo of Santa
Ana, New Mexico; Pueblo of Santa
Clara, New Mexico; Pueblo of Taos,
New Mexico; Pueblo of Tesuque, New
Mexico; Pueblo of Zia, New Mexico;
Ysleta del Sur Pueblo (previously listed
as the Ysleta Del Sur Pueblo of Texas);
and the Zuni Tribe of the Zuni
Reservation, New Mexico, hereafter
referred to as ‘‘The Tribes.’’
Additional Requestors and Disposition
Lineal descendants or representatives
of any Indian Tribe or Native Hawaiian
organization not identified in this notice
that wish to claim these cultural items
should submit a written request with
information in support of the claim to
Kathy McKenzie, Board President, La
Plata County Historical Society, 3065 W.
2nd Avenue, Durango, CO 81301,
telephone (970) 259–2402, email
director@animasmuseum.org, by May 4,
2018. After that date, if no additional
claimants have come forward, transfer
of control of the unassociated funerary
objects to The Tribes may proceed.
The La Plata County Historical
Society is responsible for notifying The
Tribes that this notice has been
published.
amozie on DSK30RV082PROD with NOTICES
Dated: March 5, 2018.
Melanie O’Brien,
Manager, National NAGPRA Program.
[FR Doc. 2018–06834 Filed 4–3–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4312–52–P
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
National Park Service
[NPS–WASO–NAGPRA–NPS0025140;
PPWOCRADN0–PCU00RP14.R50000]
Notice of Inventory Completion: West
Virginia Division of Culture and
History, Charleston, WV
National Park Service, Interior.
Notice.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The West Virginia Division of
Culture and History (WVDCH) has
completed an inventory of human
remains and associated funerary objects,
in consultation with the appropriate
Indian Tribes or Native Hawaiian
organizations, and has determined that
there is no cultural affiliation between
the human remains and associated
funerary objects and any present-day
Indian Tribes or Native Hawaiian
organizations. Representatives of any
Indian Tribe or Native Hawaiian
organization not identified in this notice
that wish to request transfer of control
of these human remains and associated
funerary objects should submit a written
request to the WVDCH. If no additional
requestors come forward, transfer of
control of the human remains and
associated funerary objects to the Indian
Tribes or Native Hawaiian organizations
stated in this notice may proceed.
DATES: Representatives of any Indian
Tribe or Native Hawaiian organization
not identified in this notice that wish to
request transfer of control of these
human remains and associated funerary
objects should submit a written request
with information in support of the
request to the WVDCH at the address in
this notice by May 4, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Caryn Gresham, Deputy
Commissioner, West Virginia Division
of Culture and History, 1900 Kanawha
Boulevard East, Charleston WV 25305–
0300, telephone (304) 558–0220, email
caryn.s.gresham@wv.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Notice is
here given in accordance with the
Native American Graves Protection and
Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), 25 U.S.C.
3003, of the completion of an inventory
of human remains and associated
funerary objects under the control of the
WVDCH, Charleston, WV. The human
remains and associated funerary objects
were removed from the Buffalo Site
(46PU31), Putnam County, WV.
This notice is published as part of the
National Park Service’s administrative
responsibilities under NAGPRA, 25
U.S.C. 3003(d)(3) and 43 CFR 10.11(d).
The determinations in this notice are
the sole responsibility of the museum,
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00089
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institution, or Federal agency that has
control of the Native American human
remains and associated funerary objects.
The National Park Service is not
responsible for the determinations in
this notice.
Consultation
A detailed assessment of the human
remains was made by the WVDCH
professional staff in consultation with
representatives of the Absentee–
Shawnee Tribe of Indians of Oklahoma;
Cayuga Nation; Cherokee Nation;
Delaware Nation, Oklahoma; Delaware
Tribe of Indians; Eastern Band of
Cherokee Indians; Eastern Shawnee
Tribe of Oklahoma; Ponca Tribe of
Indians of Oklahoma; Ponca Tribe of
Nebraska; Seneca Nation of Indians
(previously listed as the Seneca Nation
of New York); Shawnee Tribe; The
Osage Nation (previously listed as the
Osage Tribe); The Quapaw Tribe of
Indians; Tonawanda Band of Seneca
(previously listed as the Tonawanda
Band of Seneca Indians of New York);
Tuscarora Nation; and United
Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians in
Oklahoma. An invitation to consult was
also extended to the Catawba Indian
Nation (aka Catawba Tribe of South
Carolina); Kaw Nation, Oklahoma;
Miami Tribe of Oklahoma; Omaha Tribe
of Nebraska; Oneida Nation (previously
listed as the Oneida Tribe of Indians of
Wisconsin); Oneida Indian Nation
(previously listed as the Oneida Nation
of New York; Onondaga Nation; Saint
Regis Mohawk Tribe (previously listed
as the St. Regis Band of Mohawk
Indians of New York); Seneca-Cayuga
Nation (previously listed as the SenecaCayuga Tribe of Oklahoma); Stockbridge
Munsee Community, Wisconsin;
Tunica-Biloxi Indian Tribe; and
Wyandotte Nation, hereafter referred to
as ‘‘The Consulted and Invited Tribes.’’
History and Description of the Remains
From 1963 through 1965, human
remains representing, at minimum,
1,031 individuals were removed from
the Buffalo Site, Putnam County, WV.
Union Carbide Corporation (UCC)
‘‘acquired the property in the 1960s
with the intention of building a plant at
the site. Dr. Edward V. McMichael of
the West Virginia Geologic and
Economic Survey (WVGES) Archeology
Office requested permission from UCC
to excavate at the site. In 1963, a lease
agreement was signed by UCC and the
WVGES, wherein the state of West
Virginia was given the right to all
cultural items excavated at the site.
From May through October 1963, Dr.
McMichael and a crew excavated the
site. In 1965, the site excavations
E:\FR\FM\04APN1.SGM
04APN1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 65 / Wednesday, April 4, 2018 / Notices
amozie on DSK30RV082PROD with NOTICES
ceased. The cultural items and human
remains were taken to McMichael’s
headquarters in Buffalo, WV, and later
transported to the WVGES offices in
Morgantown, WV. In 1966, State
Archeologist Bettye Broyles loaned the
human remains to James Metress at
Clarion State College, PA, for research.
Metress transferred to the University of
Toledo, OH, and took the human
remains with him. In the 1980s, the
human remains were moved to the
Anthropology Department of The Ohio
State University (OSU) in Columbus,
OH. In September 2008, some of the
human remains were physically
transferred to the Grave Creek Mound
Archaeology Research Complex in
Moundsville, WV, which is under the
control of the WVDCH. Between
November 2011 and April 2016,
fourteen additional boxes of human
remains were located at OSU and
physically transferred to the WVDCH.
No known individuals were identified.
The 2,050 associated funerary objects
include 1 lot of prehistoric ceramic
sherds, 2 partially reconstructed shell
tempered pots, 1 lot of animal bone
fragments, 13 antler tines, 2 antler tine
projectile points, 1 antler pendant, 8
antler tools, 611 bone beads, 13 animal
tooth pendants, 16 bone awls/pins, 5
bone tools, 1 bone comb, 2 polished
bone tubes, 1 elk rib shoulder ornament,
1 turtle shell cup, 1 bird bone flute, 1
bone fish hook, 11 copper wrapped
beads/fragments, 1 copper tinkler, 1
pierced worked copper fragment, 28
copper fragments, 1 glass seed bead, 1
lot of shell fragments, 1,139 shell beads,
11 shell hoes, 17 shell ornaments, 12
shell pendants, 2 weeping eye mask/
gorgets, 1 rattlesnake gorget, 26 plain
shell gorgets, 2 gorgets with
unidentified motif, 1 shell maskette, 1
lot of lithic debitage, 50 projectile
points, 2 cannel coal pendants, 1 stone
pipe bowl, 1 stone ‘‘tablet,’’ and 61
hematite fragments.
Determinations Made by the West
Virginia Division of Culture and
History
Officials of the West Virginia Division
of Culture and History have determined
that:
• Pursuant to 25 U.S.C. 3001(9), the
human remains described in this notice
are Native American based on
osteological analysis and archeological
context.
• Pursuant to 25 U.S.C. 3001(9), the
human remains described in this notice
represent the physical remains of 1,031
individuals of Native American
ancestry.
• Pursuant to 25 U.S.C. 3001(3)(A),
the 2,050 objects described in this
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notice are reasonably believed to have
been placed with or near individual
human remains at the time of death or
later as part of the death rite or
ceremony.
• Pursuant to 25 U.S.C. 3001(2), a
relationship of shared group identity
cannot be reasonably traced between the
Native American human remains and
associated funerary objects and any
present-day Indian Tribe.
• Treaties, Acts of Congress, or
Executive Orders, indicate that the land
from which the Native American human
remains and associated funerary objects
were removed is the aboriginal land of
the Absentee-Shawnee Tribe of Indians
of Oklahoma; Cayuga Nation; Cherokee
Nation; Delaware Nation, Oklahoma;
Delaware Tribe of Indians; Eastern Band
of Cherokee Indians; Eastern Shawnee
Tribe of Oklahoma; Oneida Nation
(previously listed as the Oneida Tribe of
Indians of Wisconsin); Oneida Indian
Nation (previously listed as the Oneida
Nation of New York); Onondaga Nation;
Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe (previously
listed as the St. Regis Band of Mohawk
Indians of New York); Seneca Nation of
Indians (previously listed as the Seneca
Nation of New York); Seneca-Cayuga
Nation (previously listed as the SenecaCayuga Tribe of Oklahoma); Shawnee
Tribe; Stockbridge Munsee Community,
Wisconsin; Tonawanda Band of Seneca
(previously listed as the Tonawanda
Band of Seneca Indians of New York);
Tuscarora Nation; United Keetoowah
Band of Cherokee Indians in Oklahoma;
and Wyandotte Nation, hereafter
referred to as ‘‘The Aboriginal Land
Tribes.’’
• Pursuant to 43 CFR 10.11(c)(1), the
disposition of the human remains and
associated funerary objects may be to
The Aboriginal Land Tribes. The
Cherokee Nation, Eastern Shawnee
Tribe of Oklahoma, and Tonawanda
Band of Seneca (previously listed as the
Tonawanda Band of Seneca Indians of
New York), have submitted statements
of agreement to request joint disposition
of the human remains and associated
funerary objects described in this notice.
Statements of support for the
disposition were submitted by the
Absentee-Shawnee Tribe of Indians of
Oklahoma, Delaware Nation, and
Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians.
Additional Requestors and Disposition
Representatives of any Indian Tribe or
Native Hawaiian organization not
identified in this notice that wish to
request transfer of control of these
human remains and associated funerary
objects should submit a written request
with information in support of the
request to Caryn Gresham, Deputy
PO 00000
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14499
Commissioner, West Virginia Division
of Culture and History, 1900 Kanawha
Boulevard East, Charleston WV 25305–
0300, telephone (304) 558–0220, email
caryn.s.gresham@wv.gov, by May 4,
2018. After that date, if no additional
requestors have come forward, transfer
of control of the human remains and
associated funerary objects to The
Aboriginal Land Tribes may proceed.
The WVDCH is responsible for
notifying The Consulted and Invited
Tribes that this notice has been
published.
Dated: February 28, 2018.
Melanie O’Brien,
Manager, National NAGPRA Program.
[FR Doc. 2018–06832 Filed 4–3–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4312–52–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
National Park Service
[NPS–WASO–NAGPRA–NPS0025133;
PPWOCRADN0–PCU00RP14.R50000]
Notice of Inventory Completion:
Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, MA
National Park Service, Interior.
Notice.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Peabody Essex Museum
has completed an inventory of human
remains and associated funerary objects,
in consultation with the appropriate
Indian Tribes or Native Hawaiian
organizations, and has determined that
there is a cultural affiliation between the
human remains and associated funerary
objects and present-day Indian Tribes or
Native Hawaiian organizations. Lineal
descendants or representatives of any
Indian Tribe or Native Hawaiian
organization not identified in this notice
that wish to request transfer of control
of these human remains and associated
funerary objects should submit a written
request to the Peabody Essex Museum.
If no additional requestors come
forward, transfer of control of the
human remains and associated funerary
objects to the lineal descendants, Indian
Tribes, or Native Hawaiian
organizations stated in this notice may
proceed.
DATES: Lineal descendants or
representatives of any Indian Tribe or
Native Hawaiian organization not
identified in this notice that wish to
request transfer of control of these
human remains and associated funerary
objects should submit a written request
with information in support of the
request to the Peabody Essex Museum at
the address in this notice by May 4,
2018.
SUMMARY:
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04APN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 65 (Wednesday, April 4, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 14498-14499]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-06832]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
National Park Service
[NPS-WASO-NAGPRA-NPS0025140; PPWOCRADN0-PCU00RP14.R50000]
Notice of Inventory Completion: West Virginia Division of Culture
and History, Charleston, WV
AGENCY: National Park Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The West Virginia Division of Culture and History (WVDCH) has
completed an inventory of human remains and associated funerary
objects, in consultation with the appropriate Indian Tribes or Native
Hawaiian organizations, and has determined that there is no cultural
affiliation between the human remains and associated funerary objects
and any present-day Indian Tribes or Native Hawaiian organizations.
Representatives of any Indian Tribe or Native Hawaiian organization not
identified in this notice that wish to request transfer of control of
these human remains and associated funerary objects should submit a
written request to the WVDCH. If no additional requestors come forward,
transfer of control of the human remains and associated funerary
objects to the Indian Tribes or Native Hawaiian organizations stated in
this notice may proceed.
DATES: Representatives of any Indian Tribe or Native Hawaiian
organization not identified in this notice that wish to request
transfer of control of these human remains and associated funerary
objects should submit a written request with information in support of
the request to the WVDCH at the address in this notice by May 4, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Caryn Gresham, Deputy Commissioner, West Virginia Division
of Culture and History, 1900 Kanawha Boulevard East, Charleston WV
25305-0300, telephone (304) 558-0220, email [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Notice is here given in accordance with the
Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), 25
U.S.C. 3003, of the completion of an inventory of human remains and
associated funerary objects under the control of the WVDCH, Charleston,
WV. The human remains and associated funerary objects were removed from
the Buffalo Site (46PU31), Putnam County, WV.
This notice is published as part of the National Park Service's
administrative responsibilities under NAGPRA, 25 U.S.C. 3003(d)(3) and
43 CFR 10.11(d). The determinations in this notice are the sole
responsibility of the museum, institution, or Federal agency that has
control of the Native American human remains and associated funerary
objects. The National Park Service is not responsible for the
determinations in this notice.
Consultation
A detailed assessment of the human remains was made by the WVDCH
professional staff in consultation with representatives of the
Absentee-Shawnee Tribe of Indians of Oklahoma; Cayuga Nation; Cherokee
Nation; Delaware Nation, Oklahoma; Delaware Tribe of Indians; Eastern
Band of Cherokee Indians; Eastern Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma; Ponca
Tribe of Indians of Oklahoma; Ponca Tribe of Nebraska; Seneca Nation of
Indians (previously listed as the Seneca Nation of New York); Shawnee
Tribe; The Osage Nation (previously listed as the Osage Tribe); The
Quapaw Tribe of Indians; Tonawanda Band of Seneca (previously listed as
the Tonawanda Band of Seneca Indians of New York); Tuscarora Nation;
and United Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians in Oklahoma. An
invitation to consult was also extended to the Catawba Indian Nation
(aka Catawba Tribe of South Carolina); Kaw Nation, Oklahoma; Miami
Tribe of Oklahoma; Omaha Tribe of Nebraska; Oneida Nation (previously
listed as the Oneida Tribe of Indians of Wisconsin); Oneida Indian
Nation (previously listed as the Oneida Nation of New York; Onondaga
Nation; Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe (previously listed as the St. Regis
Band of Mohawk Indians of New York); Seneca-Cayuga Nation (previously
listed as the Seneca-Cayuga Tribe of Oklahoma); Stockbridge Munsee
Community, Wisconsin; Tunica-Biloxi Indian Tribe; and Wyandotte Nation,
hereafter referred to as ``The Consulted and Invited Tribes.''
History and Description of the Remains
From 1963 through 1965, human remains representing, at minimum,
1,031 individuals were removed from the Buffalo Site, Putnam County,
WV. Union Carbide Corporation (UCC) ``acquired the property in the
1960s with the intention of building a plant at the site. Dr. Edward V.
McMichael of the West Virginia Geologic and Economic Survey (WVGES)
Archeology Office requested permission from UCC to excavate at the
site. In 1963, a lease agreement was signed by UCC and the WVGES,
wherein the state of West Virginia was given the right to all cultural
items excavated at the site. From May through October 1963, Dr.
McMichael and a crew excavated the site. In 1965, the site excavations
[[Page 14499]]
ceased. The cultural items and human remains were taken to McMichael's
headquarters in Buffalo, WV, and later transported to the WVGES offices
in Morgantown, WV. In 1966, State Archeologist Bettye Broyles loaned
the human remains to James Metress at Clarion State College, PA, for
research. Metress transferred to the University of Toledo, OH, and took
the human remains with him. In the 1980s, the human remains were moved
to the Anthropology Department of The Ohio State University (OSU) in
Columbus, OH. In September 2008, some of the human remains were
physically transferred to the Grave Creek Mound Archaeology Research
Complex in Moundsville, WV, which is under the control of the WVDCH.
Between November 2011 and April 2016, fourteen additional boxes of
human remains were located at OSU and physically transferred to the
WVDCH. No known individuals were identified. The 2,050 associated
funerary objects include 1 lot of prehistoric ceramic sherds, 2
partially reconstructed shell tempered pots, 1 lot of animal bone
fragments, 13 antler tines, 2 antler tine projectile points, 1 antler
pendant, 8 antler tools, 611 bone beads, 13 animal tooth pendants, 16
bone awls/pins, 5 bone tools, 1 bone comb, 2 polished bone tubes, 1 elk
rib shoulder ornament, 1 turtle shell cup, 1 bird bone flute, 1 bone
fish hook, 11 copper wrapped beads/fragments, 1 copper tinkler, 1
pierced worked copper fragment, 28 copper fragments, 1 glass seed bead,
1 lot of shell fragments, 1,139 shell beads, 11 shell hoes, 17 shell
ornaments, 12 shell pendants, 2 weeping eye mask/gorgets, 1 rattlesnake
gorget, 26 plain shell gorgets, 2 gorgets with unidentified motif, 1
shell maskette, 1 lot of lithic debitage, 50 projectile points, 2
cannel coal pendants, 1 stone pipe bowl, 1 stone ``tablet,'' and 61
hematite fragments.
Determinations Made by the West Virginia Division of Culture and
History
Officials of the West Virginia Division of Culture and History have
determined that:
Pursuant to 25 U.S.C. 3001(9), the human remains described
in this notice are Native American based on osteological analysis and
archeological context.
Pursuant to 25 U.S.C. 3001(9), the human remains described
in this notice represent the physical remains of 1,031 individuals of
Native American ancestry.
Pursuant to 25 U.S.C. 3001(3)(A), the 2,050 objects
described in this notice are reasonably believed to have been placed
with or near individual human remains at the time of death or later as
part of the death rite or ceremony.
Pursuant to 25 U.S.C. 3001(2), a relationship of shared
group identity cannot be reasonably traced between the Native American
human remains and associated funerary objects and any present-day
Indian Tribe.
Treaties, Acts of Congress, or Executive Orders, indicate
that the land from which the Native American human remains and
associated funerary objects were removed is the aboriginal land of the
Absentee-Shawnee Tribe of Indians of Oklahoma; Cayuga Nation; Cherokee
Nation; Delaware Nation, Oklahoma; Delaware Tribe of Indians; Eastern
Band of Cherokee Indians; Eastern Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma; Oneida
Nation (previously listed as the Oneida Tribe of Indians of Wisconsin);
Oneida Indian Nation (previously listed as the Oneida Nation of New
York); Onondaga Nation; Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe (previously listed as
the St. Regis Band of Mohawk Indians of New York); Seneca Nation of
Indians (previously listed as the Seneca Nation of New York); Seneca-
Cayuga Nation (previously listed as the Seneca-Cayuga Tribe of
Oklahoma); Shawnee Tribe; Stockbridge Munsee Community, Wisconsin;
Tonawanda Band of Seneca (previously listed as the Tonawanda Band of
Seneca Indians of New York); Tuscarora Nation; United Keetoowah Band of
Cherokee Indians in Oklahoma; and Wyandotte Nation, hereafter referred
to as ``The Aboriginal Land Tribes.''
Pursuant to 43 CFR 10.11(c)(1), the disposition of the
human remains and associated funerary objects may be to The Aboriginal
Land Tribes. The Cherokee Nation, Eastern Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma,
and Tonawanda Band of Seneca (previously listed as the Tonawanda Band
of Seneca Indians of New York), have submitted statements of agreement
to request joint disposition of the human remains and associated
funerary objects described in this notice. Statements of support for
the disposition were submitted by the Absentee-Shawnee Tribe of Indians
of Oklahoma, Delaware Nation, and Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians.
Additional Requestors and Disposition
Representatives of any Indian Tribe or Native Hawaiian organization
not identified in this notice that wish to request transfer of control
of these human remains and associated funerary objects should submit a
written request with information in support of the request to Caryn
Gresham, Deputy Commissioner, West Virginia Division of Culture and
History, 1900 Kanawha Boulevard East, Charleston WV 25305-0300,
telephone (304) 558-0220, email [email protected], by May 4, 2018.
After that date, if no additional requestors have come forward,
transfer of control of the human remains and associated funerary
objects to The Aboriginal Land Tribes may proceed.
The WVDCH is responsible for notifying The Consulted and Invited
Tribes that this notice has been published.
Dated: February 28, 2018.
Melanie O'Brien,
Manager, National NAGPRA Program.
[FR Doc. 2018-06832 Filed 4-3-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4312-52-P