Notice of Inventory Completion: Cobb Institute of Archaeology, Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, MS, 72789-72790 [2023-23288]
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 203 / Monday, October 23, 2023 / Notices
Dated: October 11, 2023.
Melanie O’Brien,
Manager, National NAGPRA Program.
shared group identity between the
identifiable earlier groups, tribes,
peoples, or cultures and one or more
Indian Tribes or Native Hawaiian
organizations. The following types of
information were used to reasonably
trace the relationship: geographical.
[FR Doc. 2023–23273 Filed 10–20–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4312–52–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Determinations
National Park Service
Pursuant to NAGPRA and its
implementing regulations, and after
consultation with the appropriate
Indian Tribes and Native Hawaiian
organizations, the Hastings Museum has
determined that:
• The one cultural item described
above is 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 and are believed, by a
preponderance of the evidence, to have
been removed from a specific burial site
of a Native American individual.
• There is a relationship of shared
group identity that can be reasonably
traced between the cultural item and
The Muscogee (Creek) Nation.
[NPS–WASO–NAGPRA–NPS0036749;
PPWOCRADN0–PCU00RP14.R50000]
Notice of Intent To Repatriate Cultural
Items: Hastings Museum, Hastings, NE
National Park Service, Interior.
Notice.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
In accordance with the Native
American Graves Protection and
Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), the
Hastings Museum intends to repatriate a
certain cultural item that meets the
definition of an unassociated funerary
object and that has a cultural affiliation
with the Indian Tribes or Native
Hawaiian organizations in this notice.
The cultural item was removed from
Bartow County, GA.
DATES: Repatriation of the cultural item
in this notice may occur on or after
November 22, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Dan Brosz, Hastings
Museum, 1330 N Burlington Avenue,
Hastings, NE 68901, telephone (402)
462–2399, email dbrosz@
cityofhastings.org.
SUMMARY:
This
notice is published as part of the
National Park Service’s administrative
responsibilities under NAGPRA. The
determinations in this notice are the
sole responsibility of the Hastings
Museum. The National Park Service is
not responsible for the determinations
in this notice. Additional information
on the determinations in this notice,
including the results of consultation,
can be found in the summary or related
records held by the Hastings Museum.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
Description
At an unknown date, one cultural
item was removed from an unidentified
mound in Bartow County, GA, by R.E.
Dodge. This unassociated funerary
object came to the Hastings Museum
between 1926 and 1931. The
unassociated funerary object is an
earring made from animal bone, and it
is 1.25 inches in length.
Cultural Affiliation
The cultural item in this notice is
connected to one or more identifiable
earlier groups, tribes, peoples, or
cultures. There is a relationship of
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:24 Oct 20, 2023
Jkt 262001
Requests for Repatriation
Additional, written requests for
repatriation of the cultural item in this
notice must be sent to the Responsible
Official identified in ADDRESSES.
Requests for repatriation may be
submitted by any lineal descendant,
Indian Tribe, or Native Hawaiian
organization not identified in this notice
who shows, by a preponderance of the
evidence, that the requestor is a lineal
descendant or a culturally affiliated
Indian Tribe or Native Hawaiian
organization.
Repatriation of the cultural item in
this notice to a requestor may occur on
or after November 22, 2023. If
competing requests for repatriation are
received, the Hastings Museum must
determine the most appropriate
requestor prior to repatriation. Requests
for joint repatriation of the cultural item
are considered a single request and not
competing requests. The Hastings
Museum is responsible for sending a
copy of this notice to the Indian Tribe
identified in this notice.
Authority: Native American Graves
Protection and Repatriation Act, 25
U.S.C. 3003, and the implementing
regulations, 43 CFR 10.8, 10.10, and
10.14.
Dated: October 11, 2023.
Melanie O’Brien,
Manager, National NAGPRA Program.
[FR Doc. 2023–23274 Filed 10–20–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4312–52–P
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72789
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
National Park Service
[NPS–WASO–NAGPRA–NPS0036765;
PPWOCRADN0–PCU00RP14.R50000]
Notice of Inventory Completion: Cobb
Institute of Archaeology, Mississippi
State University, Mississippi State, MS
National Park Service, Interior.
Notice.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
In accordance with the Native
American Graves Protection and
Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), the Cobb
Institute of Archaeology, Mississippi
State University (CIA) has completed an
inventory of human remains and
associated funerary objects and has
determined that there is a cultural
affiliation between the human remains
and associated funerary objects and
Indian Tribes or Native Hawaiian
organizations in this notice. The human
remains and associated funerary objects
were removed from Oktibbeha County,
MS.
DATES: Repatriation of the human
remains and associated funerary objects
in this notice may occur on or after
November 22, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Jimmy Hardin, CIA
Director; Tony Boudreaux, CIA Curator;
and Shawn Lambert, Assistant Professor
and NAGPRA Coordinator, Cobb
Institute of Archaeology, 340 Lee
Boulevard, Mississippi State, MS 39762,
telephone (662) 325–3826, email
sl2042@msstate.edu.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
notice is published as part of the
National Park Service’s administrative
responsibilities under NAGPRA. The
determinations in this notice are the
sole responsibility of the Cobb Institute
of Archaeology. The National Park
Service is not responsible for the
determinations in this notice.
Additional information on the
determinations in this notice, including
the results of consultation, can be found
in the inventory or related records held
by the Cobb Institute of Archaeology.
SUMMARY:
Description
Human remains representing, at
minimum, 157 individuals were
removed from Oktibbeha County, MS.
Lyon’s Bluff (22OK520) is a mound and
village complex located in the Black
Prairie region in northeastern Oktibbeha
County, MS. The site was first occupied
between A.D. 1100 and 1650. During
archeological work in 2021, a second
Choctaw occupation, dating from the
late 1700s to circa 1850, was discovered.
In the summers of 1934 and 1935,
Moreau Chambers, in association with
E:\FR\FM\23OCN1.SGM
23OCN1
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
72790
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 203 / Monday, October 23, 2023 / Notices
the Mississippi Department of Archives
and History (MDAH), undertook the first
excavations at Lyon’s Bluff. Chambers
never formally documented the field
work, and the finds he recovered were
thought to be lost. Recently, human
remains belonging to five individuals
removed by Chambers were discovered
at MDAH, and in 2022, they were
transferred to the Cobb Institute of
Archaeology.
In 1965, Richard Marshall, an
archeologist at Mississippi State
University, together with members of
the Mississippi Archaeological
Association (MAA) in Oktibbeha
County, excavated a midden area in the
northeast areas of the site. In 1967,
Marshall and others from Mississippi
State University and the University of
Mississippi conducted a joint field
school, during which two large blocks
were excavated and the human remains
of, at minimum, 67 individuals were
removed and sent to Mississippi State
University. Marshall continued to
excavate at Lyon’s Bluff throughout the
late 1960s and early 1970s, during
which he removed additional burials.
Following Marshall’s excavations,
Mississippi State University continued
to hold field schools at Lyon’s Bluff, in
2001 and 2003. Most recently, in the
summer of 2021, Shawn Lambert,
Assistant Professor at Mississippi State
University, in collaboration with the
Choctaw, led an archeological survey
and excavation at the site. Their work
revealed a significant historic Choctaw
component overlying three preEuropean Contact house mounds.
The 442 associated funerary objects
are 75 lots consisting of ceramics
sherds, 56 shell fragments, 143 lots
consisting of faunal remains, 25 pieces
of lithic debitage, 10 stone tools, 45 lots
consisting of daub, one worked fossil,
eight charcoal samples, seven soil
samples, five bone awls, three pieces of
fired clay, two drilled bear teeth, one
charred corn cob, two pieces of
limestone, two turtle shells, one
necklace composed of shell beads and
bear teeth, four ceramic ear plugs, one
stone, three ground stones, two shell
beads, three charred acorns, one charred
seed, 10 pieces of sandstone, 11 worked
shells, two greenstone celts, six bone
tools, four ceramic discoidals, two shell
gorgets, one fire-cracked rock, one
partial stone palette, one nail, one gorget
composed of incised turtle shell, one
stone ear plug, one nutting stone, and
one utilized deer antler.
Cultural Affiliation
The human remains and associated
funerary objects in this notice are
connected to one or more identifiable
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:24 Oct 20, 2023
Jkt 262001
earlier groups, tribes, peoples, or
cultures. There is a relationship of
shared group identity between the
identifiable earlier groups, tribes,
peoples, or cultures and one or more
Indian Tribes or Native Hawaiian
organizations. The following types of
information were used to reasonably
trace the relationship: archeological,
oral traditional, and other information
or expert opinion.
Determinations
Requests for Repatriation
Written requests for repatriation of the
human remains and associated funerary
objects in this notice must be sent to the
Responsible Official identified in
ADDRESSES. Requests for repatriation
may be submitted by:
1. Any one or more of the Indian
Tribes or Native Hawaiian organizations
identified in this notice.
2. Any lineal descendant, Indian
Tribe, or Native Hawaiian organization
not identified in this notice who shows,
by a preponderance of the evidence, that
the requestor is a lineal descendant or
a culturally affiliated Indian Tribe or
Native Hawaiian organization.
Repatriation of the human remains
and associated funerary objects in this
notice to a requestor may occur on or
after November 22, 2023. If competing
requests for repatriation are received,
the Cobb Institute of Archaeology must
determine the most appropriate
requestor prior to repatriation. Requests
for joint repatriation of the human
remains and associated funerary objects
are considered a single request and not
competing requests. The Cobb Institute
of Archaeology is responsible for
Frm 00062
Fmt 4703
Dated: October 11, 2023.
Melanie O’Brien,
Manager, National NAGPRA Program.
[FR Doc. 2023–23288 Filed 10–20–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4312–52–P
Pursuant to NAGPRA and its
implementing regulations, and after
consultation with the appropriate
Indian Tribes and Native Hawaiian
organizations, the Cobb Institute of
Archaeology has determined that:
• The human remains described in
this notice represent the physical
remains of 157 individuals of Native
American ancestry.
• The 442 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.
• There is a relationship of shared
group identity that can be reasonably
traced between the human remains and
associated funerary objects described in
this notice and the Jena Band of
Choctaw Indians; Mississippi Band of
Choctaw Indians; and The Choctaw
Nation of Oklahoma.
PO 00000
sending a copy of this notice to the
Indian Tribes identified in this notice.
Authority: Native American Graves
Protection and Repatriation Act, 25
U.S.C. 3003, and the implementing
regulations, 43 CFR 10.9, 10.10, and
10.14.
Sfmt 4703
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
National Park Service
[NPS–WASO–NAGPRA–NPS0036758;
PPWOCRADN0–PCU00RP14.R50000]
Notice of Inventory Completion
Amendment: California State
University, Sacramento, Sacramento,
CA
National Park Service, Interior.
Notice; amendment.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
In accordance with the Native
American Graves Protection and
Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), California
State University, Sacramento has
amended a Notice of Inventory
Completion published in the Federal
Register on March 2, 2023. This notice
amends the number of associated
funerary objects in a collection removed
from Sacramento County, CA.
DATES: Repatriation of the human
remains and associated funerary objects
in this notice may occur on or after
November 22, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Dr. Dianne Hyson, Dean of
the College of Social Sciences and
Interdisciplinary Studies, California
State University, Sacramento, 6000 J
Street, Sacramento, CA 95819,
telephone (916) 278–6504, email
dhyson@csus.edu.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
notice is published as part of the
National Park Service’s administrative
responsibilities under NAGPRA. The
determinations in this notice are the
sole responsibility of California State
University, Sacramento. The National
Park Service is not responsible for the
determinations in this notice.
Additional information on the
amendments and determinations in this
notice, including the results of
consultation, can be found in the
inventory or related records held by
California State University, Sacramento.
SUMMARY:
Amendment
This notice amends the
determinations published in a Notice of
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 203 (Monday, October 23, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 72789-72790]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-23288]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
National Park Service
[NPS-WASO-NAGPRA-NPS0036765; PPWOCRADN0-PCU00RP14.R50000]
Notice of Inventory Completion: Cobb Institute of Archaeology,
Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, MS
AGENCY: National Park Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In accordance with the Native American Graves Protection and
Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), the Cobb Institute of Archaeology,
Mississippi State University (CIA) has completed an inventory of human
remains and associated funerary objects and has determined that there
is a cultural affiliation between the human remains and associated
funerary objects and Indian Tribes or Native Hawaiian organizations in
this notice. The human remains and associated funerary objects were
removed from Oktibbeha County, MS.
DATES: Repatriation of the human remains and associated funerary
objects in this notice may occur on or after November 22, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Jimmy Hardin, CIA Director; Tony Boudreaux, CIA Curator; and
Shawn Lambert, Assistant Professor and NAGPRA Coordinator, Cobb
Institute of Archaeology, 340 Lee Boulevard, Mississippi State, MS
39762, telephone (662) 325-3826, email [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This notice is published as part of the
National Park Service's administrative responsibilities under NAGPRA.
The determinations in this notice are the sole responsibility of the
Cobb Institute of Archaeology. The National Park Service is not
responsible for the determinations in this notice. Additional
information on the determinations in this notice, including the results
of consultation, can be found in the inventory or related records held
by the Cobb Institute of Archaeology.
Description
Human remains representing, at minimum, 157 individuals were
removed from Oktibbeha County, MS. Lyon's Bluff (22OK520) is a mound
and village complex located in the Black Prairie region in northeastern
Oktibbeha County, MS. The site was first occupied between A.D. 1100 and
1650. During archeological work in 2021, a second Choctaw occupation,
dating from the late 1700s to circa 1850, was discovered.
In the summers of 1934 and 1935, Moreau Chambers, in association
with
[[Page 72790]]
the Mississippi Department of Archives and History (MDAH), undertook
the first excavations at Lyon's Bluff. Chambers never formally
documented the field work, and the finds he recovered were thought to
be lost. Recently, human remains belonging to five individuals removed
by Chambers were discovered at MDAH, and in 2022, they were transferred
to the Cobb Institute of Archaeology.
In 1965, Richard Marshall, an archeologist at Mississippi State
University, together with members of the Mississippi Archaeological
Association (MAA) in Oktibbeha County, excavated a midden area in the
northeast areas of the site. In 1967, Marshall and others from
Mississippi State University and the University of Mississippi
conducted a joint field school, during which two large blocks were
excavated and the human remains of, at minimum, 67 individuals were
removed and sent to Mississippi State University. Marshall continued to
excavate at Lyon's Bluff throughout the late 1960s and early 1970s,
during which he removed additional burials.
Following Marshall's excavations, Mississippi State University
continued to hold field schools at Lyon's Bluff, in 2001 and 2003. Most
recently, in the summer of 2021, Shawn Lambert, Assistant Professor at
Mississippi State University, in collaboration with the Choctaw, led an
archeological survey and excavation at the site. Their work revealed a
significant historic Choctaw component overlying three pre-European
Contact house mounds.
The 442 associated funerary objects are 75 lots consisting of
ceramics sherds, 56 shell fragments, 143 lots consisting of faunal
remains, 25 pieces of lithic debitage, 10 stone tools, 45 lots
consisting of daub, one worked fossil, eight charcoal samples, seven
soil samples, five bone awls, three pieces of fired clay, two drilled
bear teeth, one charred corn cob, two pieces of limestone, two turtle
shells, one necklace composed of shell beads and bear teeth, four
ceramic ear plugs, one stone, three ground stones, two shell beads,
three charred acorns, one charred seed, 10 pieces of sandstone, 11
worked shells, two greenstone celts, six bone tools, four ceramic
discoidals, two shell gorgets, one fire-cracked rock, one partial stone
palette, one nail, one gorget composed of incised turtle shell, one
stone ear plug, one nutting stone, and one utilized deer antler.
Cultural Affiliation
The human remains and associated funerary objects in this notice
are connected to one or more identifiable earlier groups, tribes,
peoples, or cultures. There is a relationship of shared group identity
between the identifiable earlier groups, tribes, peoples, or cultures
and one or more Indian Tribes or Native Hawaiian organizations. The
following types of information were used to reasonably trace the
relationship: archeological, oral traditional, and other information or
expert opinion.
Determinations
Pursuant to NAGPRA and its implementing regulations, and after
consultation with the appropriate Indian Tribes and Native Hawaiian
organizations, the Cobb Institute of Archaeology has determined that:
The human remains described in this notice represent the
physical remains of 157 individuals of Native American ancestry.
The 442 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.
There is a relationship of shared group identity that can
be reasonably traced between the human remains and associated funerary
objects described in this notice and the Jena Band of Choctaw Indians;
Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians; and The Choctaw Nation of
Oklahoma.
Requests for Repatriation
Written requests for repatriation of the human remains and
associated funerary objects in this notice must be sent to the
Responsible Official identified in ADDRESSES. Requests for repatriation
may be submitted by:
1. Any one or more of the Indian Tribes or Native Hawaiian
organizations identified in this notice.
2. Any lineal descendant, Indian Tribe, or Native Hawaiian
organization not identified in this notice who shows, by a
preponderance of the evidence, that the requestor is a lineal
descendant or a culturally affiliated Indian Tribe or Native Hawaiian
organization.
Repatriation of the human remains and associated funerary objects
in this notice to a requestor may occur on or after November 22, 2023.
If competing requests for repatriation are received, the Cobb Institute
of Archaeology must determine the most appropriate requestor prior to
repatriation. Requests for joint repatriation of the human remains and
associated funerary objects are considered a single request and not
competing requests. The Cobb Institute of Archaeology is responsible
for sending a copy of this notice to the Indian Tribes identified in
this notice.
Authority: Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act,
25 U.S.C. 3003, and the implementing regulations, 43 CFR 10.9, 10.10,
and 10.14.
Dated: October 11, 2023.
Melanie O'Brien,
Manager, National NAGPRA Program.
[FR Doc. 2023-23288 Filed 10-20-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4312-52-P