Notice of Intended Repatriation: Autry Museum of the American West, Los Angeles, CA, 63971-63976 [2024-17257]

Download as PDF Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 151 / Tuesday, August 6, 2024 / Notices National Park Service is not responsible for the determinations in this notice. Abstract of Information Available Human remains representing, at least, one individual have been identified. The 54 associated funerary objects are one projectile point, one section of a drill, one modified stone, two unmodified rocks, one scraper, 45 lithic flakes, two deer antler fragments, and one bag of soil matrix. In 1966, the individual was removed from site 14LV328 in Leavenworth County, Kansas, as part of a Kansas State Historical Society excavation of a burial mound. The site has been dated to the Valley focus (50 B.C.–A.D. 400) or Kansas City Hopewell (A.D. 1–750). Dated: July 26, 2024. Melanie O’Brien, Manager, National NAGPRA Program. Cultural Affiliation [FR Doc. 2024–17261 Filed 8–5–24; 8:45 am] Based on the information available and the results of consultation, cultural affiliation is clearly identified by the information available about the human remains and associated funerary objects described in this notice. BILLING CODE 4312–52–P Fort Leavenworth has determined that: • The human remains described in this notice represent the physical remains of one individual of Native American ancestry. • The 54 objects described in this notice are reasonably believed to have been placed intentionally with or near individual human remains at the time of death or later as part of the death rite or ceremony. • There is a connection between the human remains and associated funerary objects described in this notice and the Kaw Nation, Oklahoma and the Pawnee 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 authorized representative identified in this notice under 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 an Indian Tribe or Native Hawaiian organization with cultural affiliation. Repatriation of the human remains and associated funerary objects described in this notice to a requestor may occur on or after September 5, 2024. If competing requests for VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:40 Aug 05, 2024 DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR National Park Service [NPS–WASO–NAGPRA–NPS0038395; PPWOCRADN0–PCU00RP14.R50000] Determinations ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1 repatriation are received, Fort Leavenworth 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. Fort Leavenworth is responsible for sending a copy of this notice to the Indian Tribes and Native Hawaiian organizations identified in this notice. Authority: Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, 25 U.S.C. 3003, and the implementing regulations, 43 CFR 10.10. Jkt 262001 Notice of Intended Repatriation: Autry Museum of the American West, Los Angeles, CA National Park Service, Interior. Notice. AGENCY: ACTION: In accordance with the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), the Autry Museum of the American West intends to repatriate certain cultural items that meet the definition of unassociated funerary objects or sacred objects and that have a cultural affiliation with the Indian Tribes or Native Hawaiian organizations in this notice. DATES: Repatriation of the cultural items in this notice may occur on or after September 5, 2024. ADDRESSES: Karimah Richardson, M.Phil., RPA, Associate Curator of Anthropology and Repatriation Supervisor, Autry Museum of the American West, 4700 Western Heritage Way, Los Angeles, CA 90027, telephone (323) 495–4203, email krichardson@ theautry.org. 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 Autry Museum of the American West, and additional information on the determinations in this notice, including the results of consultation, can be found in the summary or related records. The SUMMARY: PO 00000 Frm 00062 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4703 63971 National Park Service is not responsible for the determinations in this notice. Abstract of Information Available A total of 36 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The number of unassociated funerary objects are one stone bead, 33 shell beads, one fishhook blank, and one possible stone pendant. In 1873, Mr. Charles D. Voy (1.F), collected cultural items from an unknown site on San Miguel Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. Voy, gifted the cultural items to the University of California, Berkeley at an unknown date. In 1929, Mr. Alfred L. Kroeber from the University of California, Department of Anthropology, at Berkeley gave some cultural items to the Southwest Museum (now part of the Autry Museum of the American Indian). A total of two cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The number of unassociated funerary objects are one crescent knife and one coastal contracting stem cluster point. In 1901, Dr. Philip Mills Jones (1.F) collected cultural items from unknown sites on Santa Rosa Islands, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Dr. Jones was commissioned by Mrs. Phoebe Apperson Hearst to conduct archaeological explorations for the newly established Museum of Anthropology at the University. In 1929, Mr. Alfred L. Kroeber from the University of California, Department of Anthropology, at Berkeley gave some cultural items to the Southwest Museum. A total of eight cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The number of unassociated funerary objects are two columella (missing), one comal, one pipe, one wand crystal, and three wand handle fragments. In 1901, Dr. Philip Mills Jones (1.F) collected cultural items from Campsite 2 (CA– SRI–60) on Santa Rosa Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Dr. Jones was commissioned by Mrs. Phoebe Apperson Hearst to conduct archaeological explorations for the newly established Museum of Anthropology at the University. In 1929, Mr. Alfred L. Kroeber from the University of California, Department of Anthropology, at Berkeley gave some cultural items to the Southwest Museum. A total of one cultural item has been requested for repatriation. The one unassociated funerary object is a whistle. In 1901, Dr. Philip Mills Jones (1.F) collected cultural items from SW of Southeast Anchorage, Becher’s Bay, Campsite 8 (CA–SRI–76) on Santa Rosa Island, Channel Islands, in Santa E:\FR\FM\06AUN1.SGM 06AUN1 ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1 63972 Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 151 / Tuesday, August 6, 2024 / Notices Barbara County, CA. Dr. Jones was commissioned by Mrs. Phoebe Apperson Hearst to conduct archaeological explorations for the newly established Museum of Anthropology at the University. In 1929, Mr. Alfred L. Kroeber from the University of California, Department of Anthropology, at Berkeley gave some cultural items to the Southwest Museum. A total of 48 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The 48 unassociated funerary objects are shell pendants (five are currently missing). In 1901, Dr. Philip Mills Jones (1.F) collected cultural items from Campsite 11 (CA–SRI–20) on Santa Rosa Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Dr. Jones was commissioned by Mrs. Phoebe Apperson Hearst to conduct archaeological explorations for the newly established Museum of Anthropology at the University. In 1929, Mr. Alfred L. Kroeber from the University of California, Department of Anthropology, at Berkeley gave some cultural items to the Southwest Museum. A total of three cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The three unassociated funerary objects are two stone beads and one bone tube. In 1901, Dr. Philip Mills Jones (1.F) collected cultural items from the southeast coast of Canada La Jolla, Campsite 12, cave 1 (CA–SRI–154) on Santa Rosa Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Dr. Jones was commissioned by Mrs. Phoebe Apperson Hearst to conduct archaeological explorations for the newly established Museum of Anthropology at the University. In 1929, Mr. Alfred L. Kroeber from the University of California, Department of Anthropology, at Berkeley gave some cultural items to the Southwest Museum. A total of 194 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The 194 unassociated funerary objects are shell pendants (179 are currently missing). In 1901, Dr. Philip Mills Jones (1.F) collected cultural items from Campsite 21 (CA–SRI–34) on Santa Rosa Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Dr. Jones was commissioned by Mrs. Phoebe Apperson Hearst to conduct archaeological explorations for the newly established Museum of Anthropology at the University. In 1929, Mr. Alfred L. Kroeber from the University of California, Department of Anthropology, at Berkeley gave some cultural items to the Southwest Museum. VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:40 Aug 05, 2024 Jkt 262001 A total of eight cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The eight unassociated funerary objects are four hair pins and four shell ornaments. In 1901, Dr. Philip Mills Jones (1.F) collected cultural items from Campsite 30 (CA–SRI–6) on Santa Rosa Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Dr. Jones was commissioned by Mrs. Phoebe Apperson Hearst to conduct archaeological explorations for the newly established Museum of Anthropology at the University. In 1929, Mr. Alfred L. Kroeber from the University of California, Department of Anthropology, at Berkeley gave some cultural items to the Southwest Museum. A total of nine cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The nine unassociated funerary objects are two inlaid bone tubes, one bone tube, and six fishhook blanks (two are currently missing). In 1901, Dr. Philip Mills Jones (1.F) collected cultural items from Campsite 35 (CA–SRI–31), on the south coast NW of Bee Rock, on Santa Rosa Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Dr. Jones was commissioned by Mrs. Phoebe Apperson Hearst to conduct archaeological explorations for the newly established Museum of Anthropology at the University. In 1929, Mr. Alfred L. Kroeber from the University of California, Department of Anthropology, at Berkeley gave some cultural items to the Southwest Museum. A total of 72 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The 72 unassociated funerary objects are one abalone shell with a clump of red ochre, two doughnut stones, one drill, one coastal contracting stem cluster point fragment, four flakes (one are currently missing), 27 olivella shell beads, 29 shell beads (missing), two shell ornaments, four stone beads, and one stone pendant. As part of D.B. Roger’s Expedition (1.F) to the Islands between 1927 and 1928, Mr. Ronald Olson collected the cultural items from Forney’s Cove (CA–SCrI–3), Santa Cruz Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. In 1929, Alfred L. Kroeber from the University of California, Department of Anthropology, at Berkeley gave some cultural items to the Southwest Museum (now part of the Autry Museum of the American West). A total of seven cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The seven unassociated funerary objects are one fishhook fragment and six drills. In 1928, as part of D.B. Roger’s Expedition to the Islands, Ronald Olson (1.F) collected cultural items from West PO 00000 Frm 00063 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4703 Ranch (CA–ScrI–83) on Santa Cruz Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. In 1929, Mr. Alfred L. Kroeber from the University of California Department of Anthropology, at Berkeley gave some cultural items to the Southwest Museum. A total of 91 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The 91 unassociated funerary objects are one bone bead, one cup, three faunal bone tube fragments, four fishhook fragments, two hair pin fragments, one knife, 10 matting fragments, 20 shell beads, two shell ornaments, 44 stone beads, one stone pendant, and two possible whistle fragments. In 1928, as part of D.B. Roger’s Expedition to the Islands, Ronald Olson (1.F) collected cultural items from Posa Landing (CA–SCrI–100) on Santa Cruz Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. In 1929, Mr. Alfred L. Kroeber from the University of California, Department of Anthropology, at Berkeley gave some cultural items to the Southwest Museum. A total of nine cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The nine unassociated funerary objects are four cordage fragments, one cup, two drills, one lot of soap root brush with fragments, and one shell pendant. In 1928, as part of D.B. Roger’s Expedition to the Islands, Ronald Olson (1.F) collected cultural items from Smuggler’s Cove (CA–SCrI–504) on Santa Cruz Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. In 1929, Mr. Alfred L. Kroeber from the University of California, Department of Anthropology, at Berkeley gave some cultural items to the Southwest Museum. A total of two cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The two unassociated funerary objects are spear points. In 1928, Mr. Ronald Olson (1.F) collected the cultural item from Olson Site 2, 600 yards south of More Ranch (CA–SBa–43), in Santa Barbara County, CA when he was a student at the University of California, Berkeley. In 1929, Alfred L. Kroeber from the University of California, Department of Anthropology, at Berkeley gave some cultural items to the Southwest Museum. A total of 10 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The 10 unassociated funerary objects are one pipe, one inlaid bone tube, one bowl, one cooking pot that is Gabrielino/ Tongva style, and six shell beads. In 1928, Mr. Ronald Olson (1.F) collected cultural items from Olson Site 1 (More Ranch CA–SBa–46), Goleta, in Santa Barbara County, CA when he was a student at the University of California, Berkeley. In 1929, Alfred L. Kroeber E:\FR\FM\06AUN1.SGM 06AUN1 ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1 Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 151 / Tuesday, August 6, 2024 / Notices from the University of California, Department of Anthropology, at Berkeley gave some cultural items to the Southwest Museum. A total of 12 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The 12 unassociated funerary objects are 10 stone beads, one shell bead, and one faunal tooth pendant. At an unknown date, the Archaeological Society of Southern California (ASSC), a nonprofessional group, and volunteer Mr. Harry Clayton Davis (1052.G) collected cultural items from ‘‘site 9’’, surface of both Prisoner’s Harbor (CA–ScrI–240) and Coche Point, on Santa Cruz Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. Davis gifted the cultural items in 1946 to the Southwest Museum. A total of 219 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The 219 unassociated funerary objects are one breast ornament (missing), two charms (missing), one cooking pot (missing), one dress ornament (missing), one fishhook (missing), one hook, one pot, 10 shell beads, two shell ornaments, one shell pendant, five stone beads (three are missing), one stone implement (missing), one stone pendant, one string of shell beads (missing), one possible sucking tube, 186 trade beads, one wand handle, and two whistles (one is missing). Between 1877 and 1895, Dr. Frank M. Palmer (2.P), collected cultural items from unknown sites on Santa Cruz Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. In 1895, the Southwest Museum purchased the personal collection of Dr. Palmer, their first museum curator. A total of 41 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The 41 unassociated funerary objects are one bone bowl, one bone tube, one grave marker, one pin fragment, 24 shell ornaments, one stone bone, three stone pendants, and nine whistle fragments. In 1958, Mr. Thomas Hayes Meagher (1593.G) collected cultural items from unknown sites on Santa Cruz Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. Meagher gifted the cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 1959. A total of 18 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The 18 unassociated funerary objects are one lot of asphaltum (missing), three charm stones (one missing), one crystal charm, two fishhooks (two missing), one abalone shell ornament, one abalone shell pendant (missing), two soap root brushes, six stone beads (two missing), and one stone pendant. Between 1877 and 1895, Dr. Frank M. Palmer (2.P), collected cultural items from unknown sites on San Miguel Island, Channel VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:40 Aug 05, 2024 Jkt 262001 Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. The Southwest Museum purchased Dr. Palmer, their first museum curator, personal collection in 1895. A total of four cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The four unassociated funerary objects are bird claw pendants. On an unknown date, Mr. Franklin R. Johnston (948.G), collected cultural items from an unknown site on San Miguel Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. Franklin R. Johnston gifted the cultural items in 1944 to the Southwest Museum. A total of two cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The two unassociated funerary objects are one shell pendant and one shell bead. On an unknown date, Dr. Emory W. Thurston (1521.G) collected cultural items from an unknown site on San Miguel Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Dr. Thurston gifted the cultural items in 1958 to the Southwest Museum. A total of 1,647 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The 1,647 unassociated funerary objects are 23 burned shell beads, 1,415 shell beads, 183 shell ornaments, and 26 trade beads. In 1938, Mr. Willy Stahl (830.G) collected cultural items from Cuyler’s Harbor on San Miguel Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. Stahl, a volunteer (1937–1946) and later Associate in Archaeology (1947–1948) at the Southwest Museum, gifted the cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 1939. A total of 94 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The 94 unassociated funerary objects are one bone whistle (missing), one possible bird effigy, one boat effigy, one bone implement (missing), one bone tube, one bone pot, one charm pendant, one charm stone (missing), one chisel (missing), one composite fishhook shank, one cooking pot (missing), three cups, one disc (missing), four doughnut stones (one missing), 13 dress ornaments (two missing), one lot of dress ornaments (missing), one drill, nine fishhook barbs (one missing), two flakers (missing), one grooved sinker (missing), four hair pins, one harpoon point, one ladle (missing), one natural formation (missing), three necklaces (missing), one ornament (missing), one paint pot (missing), 11 pendants (eight missing), one pestle, two pins, one polishing stone, one porpoise effigy, one ring (missing), one shell bead, one spindle whorl, four stone beads, one stone bowl, one stone implement (missing), one lot of trade beads (missing), one tube, one Vandenberg PO 00000 Frm 00064 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4703 63973 Contracting Stem point, one weight, one possible weight, one whale effigy, and five whistles (one missing). Between 1877 and 1895, Dr. Frank M. Palmer (2.P), collected cultural items from unknown sites on Santa Rosa Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. The Southwest Museum purchased the collection from the museum’s first curator, Dr. Frank M. Palmer, in 1895. A total of two cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The two unassociated funerary objects are one sweat scraper and one wooden staff. At an unknown date, Archaeological Society of Southern California (ASSC), a non-professional group, and volunteer Mr. Harry Clayton Davis (1052.G) collected cultural items from ASSC ‘‘Site 4—picked up on the surface of Santa Rosa Island’’, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. Davis gifted the cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 1946. A total of 178 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The 178 unassociated funerary objects are 177 shell beads and one shell pendant. In an unknown year, Mr. Edward W. Bodman (1479.G) collected cultural items from an unknown site on Santa Rosa Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. His wife gifted the objects in 1957 to the Southwest Museum. A total of one cultural item has been requested for repatriation. The one unassociated funerary object is a modified burned faunal bone. In an unknown year, an unknown collector collected the cultural item (5.C) from an unknown site in Santa Barbara County, CA. The object was found ‘‘in collections’’ with no object number, but with ‘‘Santa Barbara’’ and ‘‘1/9’’ written on it. It is unknown how the cultural item came to the Southwest Museum. A total of two cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The two unassociated funerary objects are pestles. In an unknown date, an unknown collector collected the cultural items (18.C) from unknown sites in Santa Barbara County, CA. The objects were found in ‘‘in collections’’ with no object number. It is unknown how the objects came to the Southwest Museum. One pestle has ‘‘744/S.B. CO CAL’’ written on it and the second pestle has ‘‘777/S.B. CO CAL’’ written on it. A total of 29 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The 29 unassociated funerary objects are four bowls, four charm stones (one missing), one concretion, two mortars, four paint cups, one perforated stone, nine pestles, one pipe, one pipe preform, one pitcher, and one prong. In the late 1870s, Mr. E:\FR\FM\06AUN1.SGM 06AUN1 ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1 63974 Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 151 / Tuesday, August 6, 2024 / Notices James Wesley Calkin (311.G) collected cultural items from unknown sites in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. Calkins’ daughter gifted the cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 1923. A total of four cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The four unassociated funerary objects are modified stones. At an unknown date, Dr. Emory Wright Thurston (1521.G) collected cultural items at an unknown site in Santa Barbara County, CA. Dr. Thurston gifted the cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 1958. A total of 15 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The 15 unassociated funerary objects are four hair ornaments, five bone beads, one stone bead, one tarring pebble, one asphaltum applicator, one pestle, and two rubbing stones. At an unknown date, the Archaeological Society of Southern California (ASSC), a nonprofessional group, and volunteer Mr. Harry Clayton Davis (1052.G) collected cultural items from a hobo camp, near Mishopshnow Village, Carpinteria, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. Davis gifted the cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 1946. A total of 2,427 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The 2,427 unassociated funerary objects are one arrow (missing), five beads (missing), one bone bead (missing), two bowls, one breast ornament (missing), one lot of buttons (missing), three charm stones (two missing), two comals (missing), two cooking pots (missing), one cup (missing), three doughnut stones, one drill (missing), one Excelsior point, one grinder (missing), one knife (missing), one knife handle (missing), one metate (missing), two mortars (one missing), three necklaces (missing), one paint cake, one paint pot, one pendant (missing), four pestles (three missing), two pipes (one missing), one pot (missing), two pot lids, one pot with asphaltum, three shell beads, two shell ornaments, one organic spoon fragment, 21 stone beads (five missing), one stone ring, 2,352 trade beads, and one Vandenberg Contracting Stem Point. Between 1877 and 1895, Dr. Frank M. Palmer (2.P), collected cultural items from unknown sites along the coast of Santa Barbara County, CA. In 1895, the Southwest Museum purchased the personal collection of Dr. Palmer, their first museum curator. A total of three cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The three unassociated funerary objects are two shell ornaments and one shell bead. In May 1947, the Archaeological Survey Association of Southern California (ASA) in partnership with the Southwest Museum (3.S) conducted a VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:40 Aug 05, 2024 Jkt 262001 survey at Ajuahuilashmu Village (CA– SBa–84/CA–SBa–117), at El Capitan, in Santa Barbara County, CA. The village is now identified as two archaeological sites (CA–SBA–84 and CA–SBA–117). El Capitan State Beach was classified in June 1962 as a state beach by the State Park Commission, thus, the objects were collected before it became a state beach. Based on the temporally diagnostic artifacts and radiocarbon dates, the site has been dated to at least three periods of occupation: one from ca. 5000 years BP, one from between 2500- and 1250years BP, and the last after 1500 years BP. A total of 20 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The 20 unassociated funerary objects are one blade, one burnt faunal bone fragments, one chopper, one possible core, three debitages, two fire affected rocks, four flakes, one graver, one possible scraper, one smoothing stone, one thumbnail scraper, and three utilized flakes. In April 1947, Archaeological Survey Association of Southern California (ASA) in partnership with the Southwest Museum (7.S) conducted a survey at a ‘‘burial area at top of sea cliff’’ at Piedra De Amolar CA–SBa-93 (now known as Canada del Molino), Gaviota State Park, in Santa Barbara County, CA. A total of one cultural item has been requested for repatriation. The one unassociated funerary object is a mortar. In the late 1870s, Mr. James Wesley Calkin (311.G) collected cultural items from Goleta in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. Calkins’ daughter gifted the collection to the Southwest Museum in 1923. A total of two cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The two unassociated funerary objects are one possible asphaltum applicator and one modified stone. At an unknown date, Mr. Franklin R. Johnston (948.G), possibly thru the Archaeological Society of Southern California (ASSC), a nonprofessional group, collected cultural items from the ‘‘Old Camp’’ at Goleta Island (aka Mescalitan Island CA–SBa– 46), above Santa Barbara in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. Franklin R. Johnston gifted the cultural items in 1944 to the Southwest Museum. CA– SBa–46 dates to the Oak Grove period (prior to 3000 B.C) up to the Historic period. A total of one cultural item has been requested for repatriation. The one unassociated funerary object is an ochre. At an unknown date, the Archaeological Society of Southern California (ASSC), a non-professional group, and volunteer Mr. Harry Clayton Davis (1052.G) collected cultural items from ASSC ‘‘site PO 00000 Frm 00065 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4703 11’’ at Goleta Slough, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mrs. Harry Clayton Davis gifted the cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 1946. A total of 45 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The 45 unassociated funerary objects are four asphaltum applicators, one awl, four awl fragments, one leaf point, one scraper, 31 shell beads, two stone bones, and one tarring pebble. At an unknown date, the Archaeological Society of Southern California (ASSC), a nonprofessional group, and volunteer Mr. Harry Clayton Davis excavated at ASSC ‘‘Site 6’’ lower section of Rincon Point below railroad and highway cut, Rincon Pont (CA–SBa–1) in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mrs. Harry Clayton Davis (1052.G) gifted the cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 1946. Rincon Point (CA–SBa–1) contains both the Chumash village of Suku and a cemetery. A total of 11,941 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The 11,941 unassociated funerary objects are one abalone shell with asphaltum plugs, one atlatl weight (missing), 13 awl tips, 23 beads, 12 bone beads (one missing), one Canalino Triangular point, one charm stone, two choppers (one missing), three Coastal Contracting Stem Cluster Points, one contracting stem point, seven crystals, one dart (missing), four drills, three Excelsior Points, one grinding stone, one ground stone, one hammerstone, one knife, five manos, one mortar fragment, one ochre, one paint stone, two pestles, one plug, one point fragment, one ring with inlaid beads, two rubbing stones, 11,035 shell beads, five shell ornaments, one shell pendant, 26 stone beads, 779 possible stone beads, one stone ornament, and two stone pendants. At an unknown date, the Archaeological Society of Southern California (ASSC), a nonprofessional group, and volunteer Mr. Harry Clayton Davis excavated at ASSC ‘‘Site 1’’, ‘‘the Indian cemetery portion of Rincon Point’’ (CA–SBa–1), in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mrs. Harry Clayton Davis (1052.G) gifted the cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 1946. Rincon Point (CA–SBa–1) contains both the Chumash village of Suku and a cemetery. A total of one cultural item has been requested for repatriation. The one unassociated funerary objects is a charm stone. In the late 1870s to 1911, Mr. James Wesley Calkins (311.G) collected a cultural item from Rincon Point (CA– SBa–1), in Santa Barbara County, Mr. Calkins’ daughter, Mrs. Sydney J. Parsons, gifted the cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 1923. Rincon Point (CA–SBa–1) contains both the E:\FR\FM\06AUN1.SGM 06AUN1 ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1 Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 151 / Tuesday, August 6, 2024 / Notices Chumash village of Suku and a cemetery. A total of 479 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The 479 unassociated funerary objects are two awls (missing), seven bone bead fragments, one bone pendant, one bone tube, 11 charm stones, four composite fishhook shanks, 13 drills (two missing), three eccentric crescent knives, two gorgets, two gravers, three hair pin fragments, one hammerstone, one possible hammerstone, one possible harpoon prong, one inlaid stone bead, one inlaid stone tube (missing), three knives, eight manos (three missing), four minerals, one modified bone (missing), two modified stones, 13 mortars (four missing), one possible mortar preform, four net weights, one nut anvil, one lot of obsidian (missing), one paint cup, one paint mortar, 26 pestles (six missing), one point preform, one lot of points (missing), four polishing stones, four reamers (missing), 13 scrapers (three missing), 269 shell beads (29 missing), one shell blank, one shell bowl (missing), one shell conglomerate, three shell ornaments (one missing), one shell pendant, five stone (missing), three stone balls, one stone bead, five stone bead preforms, 29 stone beads (missing), six stone pendants, one stone pipe, one stone pipe blank, one stone pipe inlaid fragment, one sun ornament, one tarring pebble, four unmodified faunal bone fragments, and two unmodified shells. Between 1915 to 1918, Mr. and Mrs. Martin Richard Westcott (342.G) collected cultural items from excavations of graves at the upper terrace at Rincon Point (CA–SBa-1), in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. and Mrs. Westcott gifted the cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 1924. Rincon Point site contains both the Chumash village of Suku and a cemetery. A total of one cultural item has been requested for repatriation. The one unassociated funerary object is one sandstone pipe fragment. In an unknown year, an unknown collector collected the cultural item from Rincon Point (CA–SBa–1), in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. George Wharton James (421.G) bought the cultural item for $1.00 and gifted it to the Southwest Museum in 1932. It is unknown where Mr. James bought the cultural item or from whom. Rincon Point site contains both the Chumash village of Suku and a cemetery. A total of 193 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The 193 unassociated funerary objects are one possible Ano Nuevo Point, 27 Canalino Triangular Point, 34 Coastal Contracting Stem Cluster Points, one contracting stemmed point, five darts, one drill, 33 VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:40 Aug 05, 2024 Jkt 262001 Excelsior Points, one knife, one lanceolate point, one leaf point, 11 Pacific Coast Side Notched Cluster Points, one point, one spear point (missing), two stemmed points, 68 Vandenberg Contracting Stem points, and five Western Triangular Cluster Points. Between 1915 to 1918, Mr. and Mrs. Martin Richard Westcott (342.G) collected cultural items from the surface of shell knolls in the lower terrace at Rincon Point (CA–SBa–1), in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. and Mrs. Westcott gifted the cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 1924. Rincon Point site contains both the Chumash village of Suku and a cemetery. A total of 2,762 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The 2,762 unassociated funerary objects are shell beads. In the late 1870s to 1911, Mr. James Wesley Calkins (311.G) collected cultural items from the ‘‘Old Rancheria’’ at Rincon Point (CA–SBa–1), in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. Calkins’ daughter, Mrs. Sydney J. Parsons, gifted the cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 1923. Rincon Point site contains both the Chumash village of Suku and a cemetery. A total of 1,364 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The 1,364 unassociated funerary objects are one cooking slab, one burned bead, 14 burned shell beads, one faunal bone ornament, one hopper mortar, two manos (missing), seven mortars (two missing), one lot of a botanical sample of nicotiana seeds, one paint, 1,052 shell beads, 69 shell ornaments, one stone bead, one stone bowl, 211 trade beads, and one unmodified burned faunal bone fragment. In the late 1870s, Mr. James Wesley Calkin (311.G) collected cultural items from his ranch, Zaca Ranch in Santa Barbara County, CA. His daughter, Mrs. Sydney J. Parsons, gifted the cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 1923. A total of one cultural item has been requested for repatriation. The one unassociated funerary object is a stone bowl. In the late 1870s, Mr. James Wesley Calkin (311.G) collected a cultural item from an unknown site in the Santa Ynez Valley in Santa Barbara County, CA. His daughter, Mrs. Sydney J. Parsons, gifted the cultural item to the Southwest Museum in 1923. A total of 10 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The 10 unassociated funerary objects are seven pipes, one pipe fragment, one pipe preform, and one stone hook. In the late 1870s, Mr. James Wesley Calkin (311.G) collected cultural items possibly from Santa Barbara County, CA. His daughter, Mrs. Sydney J. Parsons, gifted the PO 00000 Frm 00066 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4703 63975 cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 1923. A total of two cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The two unassociated funerary objects are one corner notched point preform and one knife. In 1924, Mr. Roy Van Ross and family (679.G), collected cultural items at the Old Potter Hotel Site in Burton Mound (CA–SBa–28), in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. Ross gifted the cultural items in 1936 to the Southwest Museum. A total of two cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The two unassociated funerary objects are one gorget fragment and one ornament fragment. In 1924, Mr. Oliver Cressell Jessen (1830.G), collected cultural items at the Old Potter Hotel, at Burton Mound (CA–SBa–28) in Santa Barbara County, CA. His wife, Mrs. Celia I. Fry Jessen, gifted the cultural items in 1964 to the Southwest Museum. A total of six cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The six unassociated funerary objects are two mortars, three inlaid bone tubes and one lot of shell beads with asphaltum. In 1924, Mr. Oliver Cressell Jessen (1830.G), collected cultural items from Burton Mound (CA–SBa–28) in Santa Barbara County, CA. His wife, Mrs. Celia I. Fry Jessen, gifted the cultural items in 1964 to the Southwest Museum. A total of one cultural item has been requested for repatriation. The one unassociated funerary objects is one flageolet. In 1880, an unknown person collected the cultural item from Santa Barbara in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. John George Braecklein (964.G) purchased the cultural item for his personal collection and gifted it to the Southwest Museum in 1943. A total of two cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The two unassociated funerary objects are two whistles. On an unknown date, an unknown person collected the cultural items from Santa Barbara in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. John George Braecklein (964.G) purchased the objects for his personal collection and gifted the objects to the Southwest Museum in 1943. A total of three cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The three unassociated funerary objects are gorgets. On unknown dates, unknown collectors collected cultural items from shell mounds near Santa Barbara, in Santa Barbara County, CA. General Charles McCormick Reeve (491.P) purchased the cultural items from Argonaut Book Shop, in San Francisco, San Francisco County, CA for the Southwest Museum in 1962. E:\FR\FM\06AUN1.SGM 06AUN1 ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1 63976 Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 151 / Tuesday, August 6, 2024 / Notices A total of one cultural item has been requested for repatriation. The one unassociated funerary objects is a pipe. Between 1877 and 1895, Dr. Frank M. Palmer (2.P), collected a cultural item from an unknown shell mound along the coast of Santa Barbara County, CA. In 1895, the Southwest Museum purchased the personal collection of Dr. Palmer, their first museum curator. A total of 12 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The 12 unassociated funerary objects are one awl, one possible awl fragment, one faunal tooth, two possible grave markers, one hair pin, two modified antler fragments, three ornaments, and one pendant. In August 1936, Mr. Roy Van Ross and family (679.G), collected cultural items from 1 mile north of Lompoc Landing in what is now part of Vandenberg Air Force Base. The objects were collected before it became a base. Mr. Ross gifted the cultural items in 1936 to the Southwest Museum. A total of seven cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The seven unassociated funerary objects are one awl, two awl fragments, two burned awl fragments, one burned modified faunal fragment, and one possible hair pin fragment. In 1937, Mr. Willy Stahl (830.G) collected cultural items from a village west of Carpinteria, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. Stahl gifted the cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 1939. A total of one cultural item has been requested for repatriation. The one sacred object is a historic basket tray. At an unknown date, Miss Margaret A. Feeney (116.L) purchased the cultural item from an unknown location in Santa Barbara County, CA. Miss Feeney sent the basket to the Southwest Museum in 1922. A total of three cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The three sacred objects are pestles. In the late 1870s, Mr. James Wesley Calkin (311.G) collected cultural items from unknown sites, in Santa Barbara County, CA. His daughter, Mrs. Sydney J. Parsons, gifted the cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 1923. A total of one cultural item has been requested for repatriation. The one sacred object is a pestle. At an unknown date, the Archaeological Society of Southern California (ASSC) a nonprofessional group, and volunteer Mr. Harry Clayton Davis (1052.G) collected the cultural item from a ‘‘hobo camp’’, near Mishopshnow Village, Carpinteria, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mrs. Harry Clayton Davis (1052.G) gifted the cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 1946. VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:40 Aug 05, 2024 Jkt 262001 A total of nine cultural items have been requested for repatriation. The nine sacred objects is one feathered skirt, one mat case, one animal skin cover, one sandal, one lot of textile fragments, one scraper, one possible whistle in two fragments, and one basket water bottle. Circa 1931, Mr. James G. James collected cultural items from a cave in the southern edge of Cuyama Valley, on James Ranch, in the Sierra Madre Mountains in Santa Barbara County, CA. The cave was located on hist own property. His brother-in-law Mr. Alfonse H. Heller (217.L) sent the cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 1932. A total of one cultural item has been requested for repatriation. The one sacred object is an antler scraper. Circa 1931, Mr. James G. James collected the cultural item from a cave in the southern edge of Cuyama Valley, 1.5 miles southeast of James Ranch, in the Sierra Madre Mountains in Santa Barbara County, CA. The cave was not on his ranch. His brother-in-law Mr. Alfonse H. Heller (217.L) sent the cultural item to the Southwest Museum in 1932. Determinations The Autry Museum of the American West has determined that: • The 22,055 unassociated funerary objects described above are reasonably believed to have been placed intentionally with or near individual human remains, and are connected, either 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 an individual or individuals with cultural affiliation to an Indian Tribe or Native Hawaiian organization. • The 15 sacred objects described in this notice are specific ceremonial objects needed by a traditional Native American religious leader for presentday adherents to practice traditional Native American religion, according to the Native American traditional knowledge of a lineal descendant, Indian Tribe, or Native Hawaiian organization. • There is a reasonable connection between the cultural items described in this notice and the Santa Ynez Band of Chumash Mission Indians of the Santa Ynez Reservation, California. Requests for Repatriation Additional, written requests for repatriation of the cultural items in this notice must be sent to the authorized representative identified in this notice under ADDRESSES. Requests for PO 00000 Frm 00067 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4703 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 items in this notice to a requestor may occur on or after September 5, 2024. If competing requests for repatriation are received, the Autry Museum of the American West must determine the most appropriate requestor prior to repatriation. Requests for joint repatriation of the cultural items are considered a single request and not competing requests. The Autry Museum of the American West is responsible for sending a copy of this notice to the Indian Tribes and Native Hawaiian organizations identified in this notice and to any other consulting parties. Authority: Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, 25 U.S.C. 3004 and the implementing regulations, 43 CFR 10.9. Dated: July 25, 2024. Melanie O’Brien, Manager, National NAGPRA Program. [FR Doc. 2024–17257 Filed 8–5–24; 8:45 am] BILLING CODE 4312–52–P DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR National Park Service [NPS–WASO–NAGPRA–NPS0038403; PPWOCRADN0–PCU00RP14.R50000] Notice of Intended Repatriation: California State University, Sacramento, Sacramento, CA National Park Service, Interior. Notice. AGENCY: ACTION: In accordance with the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), the California State University, Sacramento intends to repatriate certain cultural items that meet the definition of objects of cultural patrimony and that have a cultural affiliation with the Indian Tribes or Native Hawaiian organizations in this notice. DATES: Repatriation of the cultural items in this notice may occur on or after September 5, 2024. ADDRESSES: Dr. Mark R. Wheeler, Senior Advisor to President Luke Wood, California State University, Sacramento, 6000 J Street Sacramento, CA 95819, telephone (916) 460–0490, email mark.wheeler@csus.edu. SUMMARY: E:\FR\FM\06AUN1.SGM 06AUN1

Agencies

[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 151 (Tuesday, August 6, 2024)]
[Notices]
[Pages 63971-63976]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-17257]


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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR

National Park Service

[NPS-WASO-NAGPRA-NPS0038395; PPWOCRADN0-PCU00RP14.R50000]


Notice of Intended Repatriation: Autry Museum of the American 
West, Los Angeles, CA

AGENCY: National Park Service, Interior.

ACTION: Notice.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

SUMMARY: In accordance with the Native American Graves Protection and 
Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), the Autry Museum of the American West 
intends to repatriate certain cultural items that meet the definition 
of unassociated funerary objects or sacred objects and that have a 
cultural affiliation with the Indian Tribes or Native Hawaiian 
organizations in this notice.

DATES: Repatriation of the cultural items in this notice may occur on 
or after September 5, 2024.

ADDRESSES: Karimah Richardson, M.Phil., RPA, Associate Curator of 
Anthropology and Repatriation Supervisor, Autry Museum of the American 
West, 4700 Western Heritage Way, Los Angeles, CA 90027, telephone (323) 
495-4203, 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 
Autry Museum of the American West, and additional information on the 
determinations in this notice, including the results of consultation, 
can be found in the summary or related records. The National Park 
Service is not responsible for the determinations in this notice.

Abstract of Information Available

    A total of 36 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The number of unassociated funerary objects are one stone bead, 33 
shell beads, one fishhook blank, and one possible stone pendant. In 
1873, Mr. Charles D. Voy (1.F), collected cultural items from an 
unknown site on San Miguel Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara 
County, CA. Mr. Voy, gifted the cultural items to the University of 
California, Berkeley at an unknown date. In 1929, Mr. Alfred L. Kroeber 
from the University of California, Department of Anthropology, at 
Berkeley gave some cultural items to the Southwest Museum (now part of 
the Autry Museum of the American Indian).
    A total of two cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The number of unassociated funerary objects are one crescent knife and 
one coastal contracting stem cluster point. In 1901, Dr. Philip Mills 
Jones (1.F) collected cultural items from unknown sites on Santa Rosa 
Islands, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Dr. Jones was 
commissioned by Mrs. Phoebe Apperson Hearst to conduct archaeological 
explorations for the newly established Museum of Anthropology at the 
University. In 1929, Mr. Alfred L. Kroeber from the University of 
California, Department of Anthropology, at Berkeley gave some cultural 
items to the Southwest Museum.
    A total of eight cultural items have been requested for 
repatriation. The number of unassociated funerary objects are two 
columella (missing), one comal, one pipe, one wand crystal, and three 
wand handle fragments. In 1901, Dr. Philip Mills Jones (1.F) collected 
cultural items from Campsite 2 (CA-SRI-60) on Santa Rosa Island, 
Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Dr. Jones was 
commissioned by Mrs. Phoebe Apperson Hearst to conduct archaeological 
explorations for the newly established Museum of Anthropology at the 
University. In 1929, Mr. Alfred L. Kroeber from the University of 
California, Department of Anthropology, at Berkeley gave some cultural 
items to the Southwest Museum.
    A total of one cultural item has been requested for repatriation. 
The one unassociated funerary object is a whistle. In 1901, Dr. Philip 
Mills Jones (1.F) collected cultural items from SW of Southeast 
Anchorage, Becher's Bay, Campsite 8 (CA-SRI-76) on Santa Rosa Island, 
Channel Islands, in Santa

[[Page 63972]]

Barbara County, CA. Dr. Jones was commissioned by Mrs. Phoebe Apperson 
Hearst to conduct archaeological explorations for the newly established 
Museum of Anthropology at the University. In 1929, Mr. Alfred L. 
Kroeber from the University of California, Department of Anthropology, 
at Berkeley gave some cultural items to the Southwest Museum.
    A total of 48 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The 48 unassociated funerary objects are shell pendants (five are 
currently missing). In 1901, Dr. Philip Mills Jones (1.F) collected 
cultural items from Campsite 11 (CA-SRI-20) on Santa Rosa Island, 
Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Dr. Jones was 
commissioned by Mrs. Phoebe Apperson Hearst to conduct archaeological 
explorations for the newly established Museum of Anthropology at the 
University. In 1929, Mr. Alfred L. Kroeber from the University of 
California, Department of Anthropology, at Berkeley gave some cultural 
items to the Southwest Museum.
    A total of three cultural items have been requested for 
repatriation. The three unassociated funerary objects are two stone 
beads and one bone tube. In 1901, Dr. Philip Mills Jones (1.F) 
collected cultural items from the southeast coast of Canada La Jolla, 
Campsite 12, cave 1 (CA-SRI-154) on Santa Rosa Island, Channel Islands, 
in Santa Barbara County, CA. Dr. Jones was commissioned by Mrs. Phoebe 
Apperson Hearst to conduct archaeological explorations for the newly 
established Museum of Anthropology at the University. In 1929, Mr. 
Alfred L. Kroeber from the University of California, Department of 
Anthropology, at Berkeley gave some cultural items to the Southwest 
Museum.
    A total of 194 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The 194 unassociated funerary objects are shell pendants (179 are 
currently missing). In 1901, Dr. Philip Mills Jones (1.F) collected 
cultural items from Campsite 21 (CA-SRI-34) on Santa Rosa Island, 
Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Dr. Jones was 
commissioned by Mrs. Phoebe Apperson Hearst to conduct archaeological 
explorations for the newly established Museum of Anthropology at the 
University. In 1929, Mr. Alfred L. Kroeber from the University of 
California, Department of Anthropology, at Berkeley gave some cultural 
items to the Southwest Museum.
    A total of eight cultural items have been requested for 
repatriation. The eight unassociated funerary objects are four hair 
pins and four shell ornaments. In 1901, Dr. Philip Mills Jones (1.F) 
collected cultural items from Campsite 30 (CA-SRI-6) on Santa Rosa 
Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Dr. Jones was 
commissioned by Mrs. Phoebe Apperson Hearst to conduct archaeological 
explorations for the newly established Museum of Anthropology at the 
University. In 1929, Mr. Alfred L. Kroeber from the University of 
California, Department of Anthropology, at Berkeley gave some cultural 
items to the Southwest Museum.
    A total of nine cultural items have been requested for 
repatriation. The nine unassociated funerary objects are two inlaid 
bone tubes, one bone tube, and six fishhook blanks (two are currently 
missing). In 1901, Dr. Philip Mills Jones (1.F) collected cultural 
items from Campsite 35 (CA-SRI-31), on the south coast NW of Bee Rock, 
on Santa Rosa Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Dr. 
Jones was commissioned by Mrs. Phoebe Apperson Hearst to conduct 
archaeological explorations for the newly established Museum of 
Anthropology at the University. In 1929, Mr. Alfred L. Kroeber from the 
University of California, Department of Anthropology, at Berkeley gave 
some cultural items to the Southwest Museum.
    A total of 72 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The 72 unassociated funerary objects are one abalone shell with a clump 
of red ochre, two doughnut stones, one drill, one coastal contracting 
stem cluster point fragment, four flakes (one are currently missing), 
27 olivella shell beads, 29 shell beads (missing), two shell ornaments, 
four stone beads, and one stone pendant. As part of D.B. Roger's 
Expedition (1.F) to the Islands between 1927 and 1928, Mr. Ronald Olson 
collected the cultural items from Forney's Cove (CA-SCrI-3), Santa Cruz 
Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. In 1929, Alfred 
L. Kroeber from the University of California, Department of 
Anthropology, at Berkeley gave some cultural items to the Southwest 
Museum (now part of the Autry Museum of the American West).
    A total of seven cultural items have been requested for 
repatriation. The seven unassociated funerary objects are one fishhook 
fragment and six drills. In 1928, as part of D.B. Roger's Expedition to 
the Islands, Ronald Olson (1.F) collected cultural items from West 
Ranch (CA-ScrI-83) on Santa Cruz Island, Channel Islands, in Santa 
Barbara County, CA. In 1929, Mr. Alfred L. Kroeber from the University 
of California Department of Anthropology, at Berkeley gave some 
cultural items to the Southwest Museum.
    A total of 91 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The 91 unassociated funerary objects are one bone bead, one cup, three 
faunal bone tube fragments, four fishhook fragments, two hair pin 
fragments, one knife, 10 matting fragments, 20 shell beads, two shell 
ornaments, 44 stone beads, one stone pendant, and two possible whistle 
fragments. In 1928, as part of D.B. Roger's Expedition to the Islands, 
Ronald Olson (1.F) collected cultural items from Posa Landing (CA-SCrI-
100) on Santa Cruz Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, 
CA. In 1929, Mr. Alfred L. Kroeber from the University of California, 
Department of Anthropology, at Berkeley gave some cultural items to the 
Southwest Museum.
    A total of nine cultural items have been requested for 
repatriation. The nine unassociated funerary objects are four cordage 
fragments, one cup, two drills, one lot of soap root brush with 
fragments, and one shell pendant. In 1928, as part of D.B. Roger's 
Expedition to the Islands, Ronald Olson (1.F) collected cultural items 
from Smuggler's Cove (CA-SCrI-504) on Santa Cruz Island, Channel 
Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. In 1929, Mr. Alfred L. Kroeber 
from the University of California, Department of Anthropology, at 
Berkeley gave some cultural items to the Southwest Museum.
    A total of two cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The two unassociated funerary objects are spear points. In 1928, Mr. 
Ronald Olson (1.F) collected the cultural item from Olson Site 2, 600 
yards south of More Ranch (CA-SBa-43), in Santa Barbara County, CA when 
he was a student at the University of California, Berkeley. In 1929, 
Alfred L. Kroeber from the University of California, Department of 
Anthropology, at Berkeley gave some cultural items to the Southwest 
Museum.
    A total of 10 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The 10 unassociated funerary objects are one pipe, one inlaid bone 
tube, one bowl, one cooking pot that is Gabrielino/Tongva style, and 
six shell beads. In 1928, Mr. Ronald Olson (1.F) collected cultural 
items from Olson Site 1 (More Ranch CA-SBa-46), Goleta, in Santa 
Barbara County, CA when he was a student at the University of 
California, Berkeley. In 1929, Alfred L. Kroeber

[[Page 63973]]

from the University of California, Department of Anthropology, at 
Berkeley gave some cultural items to the Southwest Museum.
    A total of 12 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The 12 unassociated funerary objects are 10 stone beads, one shell 
bead, and one faunal tooth pendant. At an unknown date, the 
Archaeological Society of Southern California (ASSC), a non-
professional group, and volunteer Mr. Harry Clayton Davis (1052.G) 
collected cultural items from ``site 9'', surface of both Prisoner's 
Harbor (CA-ScrI-240) and Coche Point, on Santa Cruz Island, Channel 
Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. Davis gifted the cultural 
items in 1946 to the Southwest Museum.
    A total of 219 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The 219 unassociated funerary objects are one breast ornament 
(missing), two charms (missing), one cooking pot (missing), one dress 
ornament (missing), one fishhook (missing), one hook, one pot, 10 shell 
beads, two shell ornaments, one shell pendant, five stone beads (three 
are missing), one stone implement (missing), one stone pendant, one 
string of shell beads (missing), one possible sucking tube, 186 trade 
beads, one wand handle, and two whistles (one is missing). Between 1877 
and 1895, Dr. Frank M. Palmer (2.P), collected cultural items from 
unknown sites on Santa Cruz Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara 
County, CA. In 1895, the Southwest Museum purchased the personal 
collection of Dr. Palmer, their first museum curator.
    A total of 41 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The 41 unassociated funerary objects are one bone bowl, one bone tube, 
one grave marker, one pin fragment, 24 shell ornaments, one stone bone, 
three stone pendants, and nine whistle fragments. In 1958, Mr. Thomas 
Hayes Meagher (1593.G) collected cultural items from unknown sites on 
Santa Cruz Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. 
Meagher gifted the cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 1959.
    A total of 18 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The 18 unassociated funerary objects are one lot of asphaltum 
(missing), three charm stones (one missing), one crystal charm, two 
fishhooks (two missing), one abalone shell ornament, one abalone shell 
pendant (missing), two soap root brushes, six stone beads (two 
missing), and one stone pendant. Between 1877 and 1895, Dr. Frank M. 
Palmer (2.P), collected cultural items from unknown sites on San Miguel 
Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. The Southwest 
Museum purchased Dr. Palmer, their first museum curator, personal 
collection in 1895.
    A total of four cultural items have been requested for 
repatriation. The four unassociated funerary objects are bird claw 
pendants. On an unknown date, Mr. Franklin R. Johnston (948.G), 
collected cultural items from an unknown site on San Miguel Island, 
Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. Franklin R. Johnston 
gifted the cultural items in 1944 to the Southwest Museum.
    A total of two cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The two unassociated funerary objects are one shell pendant and one 
shell bead. On an unknown date, Dr. Emory W. Thurston (1521.G) 
collected cultural items from an unknown site on San Miguel Island, 
Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Dr. Thurston gifted the 
cultural items in 1958 to the Southwest Museum.
    A total of 1,647 cultural items have been requested for 
repatriation. The 1,647 unassociated funerary objects are 23 burned 
shell beads, 1,415 shell beads, 183 shell ornaments, and 26 trade 
beads. In 1938, Mr. Willy Stahl (830.G) collected cultural items from 
Cuyler's Harbor on San Miguel Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara 
County, CA. Mr. Stahl, a volunteer (1937-1946) and later Associate in 
Archaeology (1947-1948) at the Southwest Museum, gifted the cultural 
items to the Southwest Museum in 1939.
    A total of 94 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The 94 unassociated funerary objects are one bone whistle (missing), 
one possible bird effigy, one boat effigy, one bone implement 
(missing), one bone tube, one bone pot, one charm pendant, one charm 
stone (missing), one chisel (missing), one composite fishhook shank, 
one cooking pot (missing), three cups, one disc (missing), four 
doughnut stones (one missing), 13 dress ornaments (two missing), one 
lot of dress ornaments (missing), one drill, nine fishhook barbs (one 
missing), two flakers (missing), one grooved sinker (missing), four 
hair pins, one harpoon point, one ladle (missing), one natural 
formation (missing), three necklaces (missing), one ornament (missing), 
one paint pot (missing), 11 pendants (eight missing), one pestle, two 
pins, one polishing stone, one porpoise effigy, one ring (missing), one 
shell bead, one spindle whorl, four stone beads, one stone bowl, one 
stone implement (missing), one lot of trade beads (missing), one tube, 
one Vandenberg Contracting Stem point, one weight, one possible weight, 
one whale effigy, and five whistles (one missing). Between 1877 and 
1895, Dr. Frank M. Palmer (2.P), collected cultural items from unknown 
sites on Santa Rosa Island, Channel Islands, in Santa Barbara County, 
CA. The Southwest Museum purchased the collection from the museum's 
first curator, Dr. Frank M. Palmer, in 1895.
    A total of two cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The two unassociated funerary objects are one sweat scraper and one 
wooden staff. At an unknown date, Archaeological Society of Southern 
California (ASSC), a non-professional group, and volunteer Mr. Harry 
Clayton Davis (1052.G) collected cultural items from ASSC ``Site 4--
picked up on the surface of Santa Rosa Island'', Channel Islands, in 
Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. Davis gifted the cultural items to the 
Southwest Museum in 1946.
    A total of 178 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The 178 unassociated funerary objects are 177 shell beads and one shell 
pendant. In an unknown year, Mr. Edward W. Bodman (1479.G) collected 
cultural items from an unknown site on Santa Rosa Island, Channel 
Islands, in Santa Barbara County, CA. His wife gifted the objects in 
1957 to the Southwest Museum.
    A total of one cultural item has been requested for repatriation. 
The one unassociated funerary object is a modified burned faunal bone. 
In an unknown year, an unknown collector collected the cultural item 
(5.C) from an unknown site in Santa Barbara County, CA. The object was 
found ``in collections'' with no object number, but with ``Santa 
Barbara'' and ``1/9'' written on it. It is unknown how the cultural 
item came to the Southwest Museum.
    A total of two cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The two unassociated funerary objects are pestles. In an unknown date, 
an unknown collector collected the cultural items (18.C) from unknown 
sites in Santa Barbara County, CA. The objects were found in ``in 
collections'' with no object number. It is unknown how the objects came 
to the Southwest Museum. One pestle has ``744/S.B. CO CAL'' written on 
it and the second pestle has ``777/S.B. CO CAL'' written on it.
    A total of 29 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The 29 unassociated funerary objects are four bowls, four charm stones 
(one missing), one concretion, two mortars, four paint cups, one 
perforated stone, nine pestles, one pipe, one pipe preform, one 
pitcher, and one prong. In the late 1870s, Mr.

[[Page 63974]]

James Wesley Calkin (311.G) collected cultural items from unknown sites 
in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. Calkins' daughter gifted the cultural 
items to the Southwest Museum in 1923.
    A total of four cultural items have been requested for 
repatriation. The four unassociated funerary objects are modified 
stones. At an unknown date, Dr. Emory Wright Thurston (1521.G) 
collected cultural items at an unknown site in Santa Barbara County, 
CA. Dr. Thurston gifted the cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 
1958.
    A total of 15 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The 15 unassociated funerary objects are four hair ornaments, five bone 
beads, one stone bead, one tarring pebble, one asphaltum applicator, 
one pestle, and two rubbing stones. At an unknown date, the 
Archaeological Society of Southern California (ASSC), a non-
professional group, and volunteer Mr. Harry Clayton Davis (1052.G) 
collected cultural items from a hobo camp, near Mishopshnow Village, 
Carpinteria, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. Davis gifted the cultural 
items to the Southwest Museum in 1946.
    A total of 2,427 cultural items have been requested for 
repatriation. The 2,427 unassociated funerary objects are one arrow 
(missing), five beads (missing), one bone bead (missing), two bowls, 
one breast ornament (missing), one lot of buttons (missing), three 
charm stones (two missing), two comals (missing), two cooking pots 
(missing), one cup (missing), three doughnut stones, one drill 
(missing), one Excelsior point, one grinder (missing), one knife 
(missing), one knife handle (missing), one metate (missing), two 
mortars (one missing), three necklaces (missing), one paint cake, one 
paint pot, one pendant (missing), four pestles (three missing), two 
pipes (one missing), one pot (missing), two pot lids, one pot with 
asphaltum, three shell beads, two shell ornaments, one organic spoon 
fragment, 21 stone beads (five missing), one stone ring, 2,352 trade 
beads, and one Vandenberg Contracting Stem Point. Between 1877 and 
1895, Dr. Frank M. Palmer (2.P), collected cultural items from unknown 
sites along the coast of Santa Barbara County, CA. In 1895, the 
Southwest Museum purchased the personal collection of Dr. Palmer, their 
first museum curator.
    A total of three cultural items have been requested for 
repatriation. The three unassociated funerary objects are two shell 
ornaments and one shell bead. In May 1947, the Archaeological Survey 
Association of Southern California (ASA) in partnership with the 
Southwest Museum (3.S) conducted a survey at Ajuahuilashmu Village (CA-
SBa-84/CA-SBa-117), at El Capitan, in Santa Barbara County, CA. The 
village is now identified as two archaeological sites (CA-SBA-84 and 
CA-SBA-117). El Capitan State Beach was classified in June 1962 as a 
state beach by the State Park Commission, thus, the objects were 
collected before it became a state beach. Based on the temporally 
diagnostic artifacts and radiocarbon dates, the site has been dated to 
at least three periods of occupation: one from ca. 5000 years BP, one 
from between 2500- and 1250-years BP, and the last after 1500 years BP.
    A total of 20 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The 20 unassociated funerary objects are one blade, one burnt faunal 
bone fragments, one chopper, one possible core, three debitages, two 
fire affected rocks, four flakes, one graver, one possible scraper, one 
smoothing stone, one thumbnail scraper, and three utilized flakes. In 
April 1947, Archaeological Survey Association of Southern California 
(ASA) in partnership with the Southwest Museum (7.S) conducted a survey 
at a ``burial area at top of sea cliff'' at Piedra De Amolar CA-SBa-93 
(now known as Canada del Molino), Gaviota State Park, in Santa Barbara 
County, CA.
    A total of one cultural item has been requested for repatriation. 
The one unassociated funerary object is a mortar. In the late 1870s, 
Mr. James Wesley Calkin (311.G) collected cultural items from Goleta in 
Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. Calkins' daughter gifted the collection 
to the Southwest Museum in 1923.
    A total of two cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The two unassociated funerary objects are one possible asphaltum 
applicator and one modified stone. At an unknown date, Mr. Franklin R. 
Johnston (948.G), possibly thru the Archaeological Society of Southern 
California (ASSC), a non-professional group, collected cultural items 
from the ``Old Camp'' at Goleta Island (aka Mescalitan Island CA-SBa-
46), above Santa Barbara in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. Franklin R. 
Johnston gifted the cultural items in 1944 to the Southwest Museum. CA-
SBa-46 dates to the Oak Grove period (prior to 3000 B.C) up to the 
Historic period.
    A total of one cultural item has been requested for repatriation. 
The one unassociated funerary object is an ochre. At an unknown date, 
the Archaeological Society of Southern California (ASSC), a non-
professional group, and volunteer Mr. Harry Clayton Davis (1052.G) 
collected cultural items from ASSC ``site 11'' at Goleta Slough, in 
Santa Barbara County, CA. Mrs. Harry Clayton Davis gifted the cultural 
items to the Southwest Museum in 1946.
    A total of 45 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The 45 unassociated funerary objects are four asphaltum applicators, 
one awl, four awl fragments, one leaf point, one scraper, 31 shell 
beads, two stone bones, and one tarring pebble. At an unknown date, the 
Archaeological Society of Southern California (ASSC), a non-
professional group, and volunteer Mr. Harry Clayton Davis excavated at 
ASSC ``Site 6'' lower section of Rincon Point below railroad and 
highway cut, Rincon Pont (CA-SBa-1) in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mrs. 
Harry Clayton Davis (1052.G) gifted the cultural items to the Southwest 
Museum in 1946. Rincon Point (CA-SBa-1) contains both the Chumash 
village of Suku and a cemetery.
    A total of 11,941 cultural items have been requested for 
repatriation. The 11,941 unassociated funerary objects are one abalone 
shell with asphaltum plugs, one atlatl weight (missing), 13 awl tips, 
23 beads, 12 bone beads (one missing), one Canalino Triangular point, 
one charm stone, two choppers (one missing), three Coastal Contracting 
Stem Cluster Points, one contracting stem point, seven crystals, one 
dart (missing), four drills, three Excelsior Points, one grinding 
stone, one ground stone, one hammerstone, one knife, five manos, one 
mortar fragment, one ochre, one paint stone, two pestles, one plug, one 
point fragment, one ring with inlaid beads, two rubbing stones, 11,035 
shell beads, five shell ornaments, one shell pendant, 26 stone beads, 
779 possible stone beads, one stone ornament, and two stone pendants. 
At an unknown date, the Archaeological Society of Southern California 
(ASSC), a non-professional group, and volunteer Mr. Harry Clayton Davis 
excavated at ASSC ``Site 1'', ``the Indian cemetery portion of Rincon 
Point'' (CA-SBa-1), in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mrs. Harry Clayton 
Davis (1052.G) gifted the cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 
1946. Rincon Point (CA-SBa-1) contains both the Chumash village of Suku 
and a cemetery.
    A total of one cultural item has been requested for repatriation. 
The one unassociated funerary objects is a charm stone. In the late 
1870s to 1911, Mr. James Wesley Calkins (311.G) collected a cultural 
item from Rincon Point (CA-SBa-1), in Santa Barbara County, Mr. 
Calkins' daughter, Mrs. Sydney J. Parsons, gifted the cultural items to 
the Southwest Museum in 1923. Rincon Point (CA-SBa-1) contains both the

[[Page 63975]]

Chumash village of Suku and a cemetery.
    A total of 479 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The 479 unassociated funerary objects are two awls (missing), seven 
bone bead fragments, one bone pendant, one bone tube, 11 charm stones, 
four composite fishhook shanks, 13 drills (two missing), three 
eccentric crescent knives, two gorgets, two gravers, three hair pin 
fragments, one hammerstone, one possible hammerstone, one possible 
harpoon prong, one inlaid stone bead, one inlaid stone tube (missing), 
three knives, eight manos (three missing), four minerals, one modified 
bone (missing), two modified stones, 13 mortars (four missing), one 
possible mortar preform, four net weights, one nut anvil, one lot of 
obsidian (missing), one paint cup, one paint mortar, 26 pestles (six 
missing), one point preform, one lot of points (missing), four 
polishing stones, four reamers (missing), 13 scrapers (three missing), 
269 shell beads (29 missing), one shell blank, one shell bowl 
(missing), one shell conglomerate, three shell ornaments (one missing), 
one shell pendant, five stone (missing), three stone balls, one stone 
bead, five stone bead preforms, 29 stone beads (missing), six stone 
pendants, one stone pipe, one stone pipe blank, one stone pipe inlaid 
fragment, one sun ornament, one tarring pebble, four unmodified faunal 
bone fragments, and two unmodified shells. Between 1915 to 1918, Mr. 
and Mrs. Martin Richard Westcott (342.G) collected cultural items from 
excavations of graves at the upper terrace at Rincon Point (CA-SBa-1), 
in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. and Mrs. Westcott gifted the cultural 
items to the Southwest Museum in 1924. Rincon Point site contains both 
the Chumash village of Suku and a cemetery.
    A total of one cultural item has been requested for repatriation. 
The one unassociated funerary object is one sandstone pipe fragment. In 
an unknown year, an unknown collector collected the cultural item from 
Rincon Point (CA-SBa-1), in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. George 
Wharton James (421.G) bought the cultural item for $1.00 and gifted it 
to the Southwest Museum in 1932. It is unknown where Mr. James bought 
the cultural item or from whom. Rincon Point site contains both the 
Chumash village of Suku and a cemetery.
    A total of 193 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The 193 unassociated funerary objects are one possible Ano Nuevo Point, 
27 Canalino Triangular Point, 34 Coastal Contracting Stem Cluster 
Points, one contracting stemmed point, five darts, one drill, 33 
Excelsior Points, one knife, one lanceolate point, one leaf point, 11 
Pacific Coast Side Notched Cluster Points, one point, one spear point 
(missing), two stemmed points, 68 Vandenberg Contracting Stem points, 
and five Western Triangular Cluster Points. Between 1915 to 1918, Mr. 
and Mrs. Martin Richard Westcott (342.G) collected cultural items from 
the surface of shell knolls in the lower terrace at Rincon Point (CA-
SBa-1), in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. and Mrs. Westcott gifted the 
cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 1924. Rincon Point site 
contains both the Chumash village of Suku and a cemetery.
    A total of 2,762 cultural items have been requested for 
repatriation. The 2,762 unassociated funerary objects are shell beads. 
In the late 1870s to 1911, Mr. James Wesley Calkins (311.G) collected 
cultural items from the ``Old Rancheria'' at Rincon Point (CA-SBa-1), 
in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. Calkins' daughter, Mrs. Sydney J. 
Parsons, gifted the cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 1923. 
Rincon Point site contains both the Chumash village of Suku and a 
cemetery.
    A total of 1,364 cultural items have been requested for 
repatriation. The 1,364 unassociated funerary objects are one cooking 
slab, one burned bead, 14 burned shell beads, one faunal bone ornament, 
one hopper mortar, two manos (missing), seven mortars (two missing), 
one lot of a botanical sample of nicotiana seeds, one paint, 1,052 
shell beads, 69 shell ornaments, one stone bead, one stone bowl, 211 
trade beads, and one unmodified burned faunal bone fragment. In the 
late 1870s, Mr. James Wesley Calkin (311.G) collected cultural items 
from his ranch, Zaca Ranch in Santa Barbara County, CA. His daughter, 
Mrs. Sydney J. Parsons, gifted the cultural items to the Southwest 
Museum in 1923.
    A total of one cultural item has been requested for repatriation. 
The one unassociated funerary object is a stone bowl. In the late 
1870s, Mr. James Wesley Calkin (311.G) collected a cultural item from 
an unknown site in the Santa Ynez Valley in Santa Barbara County, CA. 
His daughter, Mrs. Sydney J. Parsons, gifted the cultural item to the 
Southwest Museum in 1923.
    A total of 10 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The 10 unassociated funerary objects are seven pipes, one pipe 
fragment, one pipe preform, and one stone hook. In the late 1870s, Mr. 
James Wesley Calkin (311.G) collected cultural items possibly from 
Santa Barbara County, CA. His daughter, Mrs. Sydney J. Parsons, gifted 
the cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 1923.
    A total of two cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The two unassociated funerary objects are one corner notched point 
preform and one knife. In 1924, Mr. Roy Van Ross and family (679.G), 
collected cultural items at the Old Potter Hotel Site in Burton Mound 
(CA-SBa-28), in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. Ross gifted the cultural 
items in 1936 to the Southwest Museum.
    A total of two cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The two unassociated funerary objects are one gorget fragment and one 
ornament fragment. In 1924, Mr. Oliver Cressell Jessen (1830.G), 
collected cultural items at the Old Potter Hotel, at Burton Mound (CA-
SBa-28) in Santa Barbara County, CA. His wife, Mrs. Celia I. Fry 
Jessen, gifted the cultural items in 1964 to the Southwest Museum.
    A total of six cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The six unassociated funerary objects are two mortars, three inlaid 
bone tubes and one lot of shell beads with asphaltum. In 1924, Mr. 
Oliver Cressell Jessen (1830.G), collected cultural items from Burton 
Mound (CA-SBa-28) in Santa Barbara County, CA. His wife, Mrs. Celia I. 
Fry Jessen, gifted the cultural items in 1964 to the Southwest Museum.
    A total of one cultural item has been requested for repatriation. 
The one unassociated funerary objects is one flageolet. In 1880, an 
unknown person collected the cultural item from Santa Barbara in Santa 
Barbara County, CA. Mr. John George Braecklein (964.G) purchased the 
cultural item for his personal collection and gifted it to the 
Southwest Museum in 1943.
    A total of two cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The two unassociated funerary objects are two whistles. On an unknown 
date, an unknown person collected the cultural items from Santa Barbara 
in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. John George Braecklein (964.G) 
purchased the objects for his personal collection and gifted the 
objects to the Southwest Museum in 1943.
    A total of three cultural items have been requested for 
repatriation. The three unassociated funerary objects are gorgets. On 
unknown dates, unknown collectors collected cultural items from shell 
mounds near Santa Barbara, in Santa Barbara County, CA. General Charles 
McCormick Reeve (491.P) purchased the cultural items from Argonaut Book 
Shop, in San Francisco, San Francisco County, CA for the Southwest 
Museum in 1962.

[[Page 63976]]

    A total of one cultural item has been requested for repatriation. 
The one unassociated funerary objects is a pipe. Between 1877 and 1895, 
Dr. Frank M. Palmer (2.P), collected a cultural item from an unknown 
shell mound along the coast of Santa Barbara County, CA. In 1895, the 
Southwest Museum purchased the personal collection of Dr. Palmer, their 
first museum curator.
    A total of 12 cultural items have been requested for repatriation. 
The 12 unassociated funerary objects are one awl, one possible awl 
fragment, one faunal tooth, two possible grave markers, one hair pin, 
two modified antler fragments, three ornaments, and one pendant. In 
August 1936, Mr. Roy Van Ross and family (679.G), collected cultural 
items from 1 mile north of Lompoc Landing in what is now part of 
Vandenberg Air Force Base. The objects were collected before it became 
a base. Mr. Ross gifted the cultural items in 1936 to the Southwest 
Museum.
    A total of seven cultural items have been requested for 
repatriation. The seven unassociated funerary objects are one awl, two 
awl fragments, two burned awl fragments, one burned modified faunal 
fragment, and one possible hair pin fragment. In 1937, Mr. Willy Stahl 
(830.G) collected cultural items from a village west of Carpinteria, in 
Santa Barbara County, CA. Mr. Stahl gifted the cultural items to the 
Southwest Museum in 1939.
    A total of one cultural item has been requested for repatriation. 
The one sacred object is a historic basket tray. At an unknown date, 
Miss Margaret A. Feeney (116.L) purchased the cultural item from an 
unknown location in Santa Barbara County, CA. Miss Feeney sent the 
basket to the Southwest Museum in 1922.
    A total of three cultural items have been requested for 
repatriation. The three sacred objects are pestles. In the late 1870s, 
Mr. James Wesley Calkin (311.G) collected cultural items from unknown 
sites, in Santa Barbara County, CA. His daughter, Mrs. Sydney J. 
Parsons, gifted the cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 1923.
    A total of one cultural item has been requested for repatriation. 
The one sacred object is a pestle. At an unknown date, the 
Archaeological Society of Southern California (ASSC) a non-professional 
group, and volunteer Mr. Harry Clayton Davis (1052.G) collected the 
cultural item from a ``hobo camp'', near Mishopshnow Village, 
Carpinteria, in Santa Barbara County, CA. Mrs. Harry Clayton Davis 
(1052.G) gifted the cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 1946.
    A total of nine cultural items have been requested for 
repatriation. The nine sacred objects is one feathered skirt, one mat 
case, one animal skin cover, one sandal, one lot of textile fragments, 
one scraper, one possible whistle in two fragments, and one basket 
water bottle. Circa 1931, Mr. James G. James collected cultural items 
from a cave in the southern edge of Cuyama Valley, on James Ranch, in 
the Sierra Madre Mountains in Santa Barbara County, CA. The cave was 
located on hist own property. His brother-in-law Mr. Alfonse H. Heller 
(217.L) sent the cultural items to the Southwest Museum in 1932.
    A total of one cultural item has been requested for repatriation. 
The one sacred object is an antler scraper. Circa 1931, Mr. James G. 
James collected the cultural item from a cave in the southern edge of 
Cuyama Valley, 1.5 miles southeast of James Ranch, in the Sierra Madre 
Mountains in Santa Barbara County, CA. The cave was not on his ranch. 
His brother-in-law Mr. Alfonse H. Heller (217.L) sent the cultural item 
to the Southwest Museum in 1932.

Determinations

    The Autry Museum of the American West has determined that:
     The 22,055 unassociated funerary objects described above 
are reasonably believed to have been placed intentionally with or near 
individual human remains, and are connected, either 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 an individual or individuals with cultural 
affiliation to an Indian Tribe or Native Hawaiian organization.
     The 15 sacred objects described in this notice are 
specific ceremonial objects needed by a traditional Native American 
religious leader for present-day adherents to practice traditional 
Native American religion, according to the Native American traditional 
knowledge of a lineal descendant, Indian Tribe, or Native Hawaiian 
organization.
     There is a reasonable connection between the cultural 
items described in this notice and the Santa Ynez Band of Chumash 
Mission Indians of the Santa Ynez Reservation, California.

Requests for Repatriation

    Additional, written requests for repatriation of the cultural items 
in this notice must be sent to the authorized representative identified 
in this notice under 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 items in this notice to a requestor 
may occur on or after September 5, 2024. If competing requests for 
repatriation are received, the Autry Museum of the American West must 
determine the most appropriate requestor prior to repatriation. 
Requests for joint repatriation of the cultural items are considered a 
single request and not competing requests. The Autry Museum of the 
American West is responsible for sending a copy of this notice to the 
Indian Tribes and Native Hawaiian organizations identified in this 
notice and to any other consulting parties.
    Authority: Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, 
25 U.S.C. 3004 and the implementing regulations, 43 CFR 10.9.

    Dated: July 25, 2024.
Melanie O'Brien,
Manager, National NAGPRA Program.
[FR Doc. 2024-17257 Filed 8-5-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4312-52-P


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