By Jennifer MacDonald
© 2008 chicoSol
The hike to the archeological dig
site is long, dusty and steep.
Scaling down the embankment on this
winter afternoon, we see a dozen scientists hard at work hundreds of feet
below, digging at what was once a thriving Native American village. The site is
usually under the water of Lake Oroville, but the water level drops at this
time of year, helping to uncover artifacts from a civilization lost long ago.
Anthropologists and archaeologists
use shovels to sculpt deep but perfectly rectangular holes. Then they screen the
dirt looking for artifacts. Arrowheads and stone tools lie just below the
ground's surface. The items they find are placed in plastic bags, tagged and
shipped away.
Digs like this one are part of the
federal re-licensing process for the Oroville Dam, a key component in the
state's water system.
But the digs have caused a rift
between the Konkow Maidu -- Native Americans who live in the Oroville area -- and
the government agencies in charge of the excavations that have uncovered
artifacts, some dating back 5,000 years.
Many Maidu say they feel violated
by the digging and collection of their ancestors' bones and belongings. They
are resentful the artifacts and even human remains end up in the possession of
government agencies and universities. And they say they want the sites left
alone for spiritual reasons.
But under state and federal law,
the Department of Water Resources must assess the "cultural impact" of the dam.
That means locating and taking inventory of thousands of Native American village
sites as well as ceremonial and burial grounds.
The artifacts tell a story about the
indigenous societies that thrived for thousands of years without pollution,
paved streets or poverty, societies that existed without drug abuse, jails or
guns. Discovering the story of the Maidu and their ancestors could offer insight
into a way of life that was connected to the natural world.
But for many Maidu alive today, the
search for answers has gone too far.
Excavations seen as discrimination
Art Angle is a tall, stout 67-year-old
Konkow Maidu man who speaks with dignity and authority, but likes to joke
around, too. Angle's grey and black hair is just long enough to slick back. He's
dressed in cowboy boots and Wrangler jeans and a pack of Pall Malls is visible
through his shirt pocket.
"They've dug us up, they've
examined us, they've turned us inside out," Angle said. "They've run us through
carbon dating, DNA… whatever they can do to figure out what we looked like,
what we ate, and how we survived all these years without European influence."
Angle, who grew up in Enterprise,
one of the towns that was destroyed and flooded by Lake Oroville in the 1960s
with the construction of the dam, has spent much of his life fighting for the
cultural and political rights of Native Americans. He helped develop the tribal
government system for the Enterprise Rancheria tribe that was first organized
in 1995.
And Angle led the fight to locate
and bury the brain of "Ishi," the name given the man who was believed to be the
last surviving member of the Yahi tribe after he emerged near Oroville in the
early 1900s. The story of the recovery of Ishi's brain from the Smithsonian –
documented by many writers – may be one of the most well-known and wrenching
stories of repatriation.
Today, Angle is among the many
Maidu who view the excavation of their ancestors' bones and belongings as a new
form of discrimination against a people that has already suffered too much.
"They're not going out and killing
us like they did before," Angle said. "But on the other hand, when we say 'no
digging,' the funds seem to come available for them to continue digging."
The fight to stop the digging has persisted
since the archeological digs began in 2004 with the beginning of the federal
re-licensing process for the Oroville Dam and its facilities. More than 1,000
sites have been located within the project area. At least 600 additional sites
are expected to be surveyed in the upcoming years, making the project area one
of the richest in site locations in the state, said Janis Offermann, cultural
resources manager for DWR.
"We knew there'd be sites with a
lot of artifacts," Offermann said, "but the sheer number of artifacts was a
surprise."
Dig sites include Native village,
burial and sacred grounds located within the 40,000-acre project area of the Oroville
Dam and its facilities. Under the Native American Graves and Protection and Repatriation
Act (NAGPRA), if crews uncover human remains, the digging must stop and the
tribes must be notified.
The federal law also requires that all
human remains and items associated with burial or sacred ceremonies in the
possession of the government or private collections be returned to tribes. No
human remains have been returned to tribes in Oroville, although 138 bodies
were dug up in the early 1960s.
But artifacts like arrowheads and
stone tools found within the state-owned project area become the property of
the state, Offermann said. The artifacts are shipped to California State University,
Sacramento, for research.
This infuriates Maidu leaders like
Gary Archuleta, chairman of Mooretown Rancheria that operates Gold Country
Casino in Oroville. Artifacts should be returned to the tribes, Archuleta said,
"not just carted off in a box to end up sitting somewhere."
"We can give them a proper ceremony
and bury them," he added.
Sacred Burial Ground Tieh Wiah Uncovered
Rick Ramirez, program manager for the
re-licensing project of the Oroville Facilities has witnessed first hand how
relationships have changed between DWR and Native American communities.
He has worked for DWR for more than
30 years and says the state entity is trying hard to restore relations with the
Maidu—relations that have been tarnished over the years.
"We've learned that being good
neighbors is good policy," Ramirez said. "The tribes aren't going away—that's
their historical area. And the state government isn't going away. So it's a good
idea for us to sit down and see eye to eye."
The Oroville Dam is the single most
important component of the California State Water Project that provides water
to 25 million Californians and 750,000 acres of farmland. So the state has an
interest in meeting the mandates of the law.
The dam, standing at the foot of
the Sierra Nevada mountain range, towers 770 feet high and is the tallest dam in the United States.
It was considered an engineering feat when
it was completed in 1968, and it created Lake Oroville, the largest reservoir
in the state water project.
DWR's 1957 license to operate the
Oroville Dam expired last year. Now, the dam is operating on a temporary annual
license. DWR wants to re-license the dam for another 50 years. But by law, the
agency must assess the impact on sites within a quarter-mile radius of the
project area.
Artifacts are dated to determine
trading boundaries and how long Native peoples engaged in various subsistence
activities, Offermann said.
When the dam was built in the 1960s,
there were no government regulations on cultural items. Today, the cultural
preservation and inventory of the area is one of the largest components of the
re-licensing project, Offermann said.
In the early 1960s, archeology
teams wanted to salvage artifacts before the valley was flooded by Lake Oroville.
One dig that took place at Tieh Wiah -- a Native burial ground and sacred site
-- unearthed the skeletal remains of 138 individuals buried in graves, along
with hundreds of thousands of sacred objects. Some of the bones were determined
to be 4,000 years old. The dig was termed a "salvage dig" because it was done
in a hurry and some items were lost in the process.
The research teams took bones and
artifacts to Sacramento for further study. Forty years later, all the human
remains and objects are still stored in cardboard boxes in a West Sacramento
warehouse. Maidu from Oroville and Chico -- including Patsy Seek, chairwoman of
the Konkow Valley Band of Maidu -- are today fighting to reclaim and rebury
their ancestors.
"When we bury our people we expect
that they are going to heaven," Seek said. "Why should they be dug up again to
find out how old they are? How can people manage to think that's right? Why
don't they think about how we feel?"
Now that archeological projects are
underway a second time around, many Maidu are saying enough. "We have been firm
and standing unified that we don't want any more digging," said Angle, adding
that the Maidu want control of the sites.
DWR can't give control to Maidu
because the sites are on state property, Offermann says. And DWR is legally
bound to figure out which sites need protection. Sites deemed culturally or
historically significant are placed on national or state registers of Historic
Places.
"We've got legal obligations to
specify what did we find out there," Ramirez said. "In order to answer
questions if it should be on the list of historic places we have to provide
data. If we can't analyze the site, that becomes a little bit harder."
To the Maidu, every dig is painful.
"The long history of how Native
American people have been treated in California is a trend that has continued
on," Angle said. "It's complete disrespect."
But today -- after almost 200 years
of conquest and cultural destruction
(See sidebar on Surviving Genocide)
– it's increasingly clear
that much can be learned from Native American culture. The costs of
environmental degradation have helped prompt an interest in Native societies
that valued their connections to nature over profits and power.
Richard Burrill, author of the
historical novel, "River of Sorrows: The Life History of the Maidu Nisenan
Indians," gives seminars on the history of Northern California focusing on Native
American society. "The California Indians I've met have a sense of place," Burrill
said. "They really love the land, which is so beautiful. And with gradual
change, non-Indians don't even know what they've lost.
"If we can learn their old ways,
we're going to gain a better sense of place and our purpose as human beings in California,"
Burrill said.
A Story that Rests in the Earth
Back along the shores of Lake Oroville,
as archeologists sift through the dirt and rocks, a story about life and human
existence emerges.
Each handcrafted arrowhead and
stone tool dropped into a plastic bag and tagged serves as a reminder of how
far our lives have become disconnected from the dirt and the trees and the
wind.
For some Maidu and the scientists,
discovering the world of the hunter-gatherer tribes is really a search for
identity.
Lawana Watson, 44, belongs to the
Enterprise Rancheria, and grew up in Oroville, but didn't connect with her
culture until about 15 years ago. Since learning how her ancestors lived,
Watson feels her life has a purpose.
"Identity is most important,"
Watson said. "It makes me think about what I can do to better my kids' and
grandkids' lives, how to use our environment to teach our kids our culture."
One local Maidu man actually takes
part in the archeological digs. Wayne Nine, a member of the Konkow Valley Band
of Maidu, says he feels a connection to the objects unearthed. "The artifacts
we find have stories to be told," Nine said. "I feel that some artifacts come
to me in dreams. Finding artifacts is a part of who I am, too, not just my
ancestors."
Archeologists studying the
arrowheads, stone tools and animal bone fragments piece together lives from the
past to answer questions about human nature.
"I want to understand why humans
work the way we do, what motivates us, what drives us," says Michael Delacorte,
an anthropology professor at California State University, Sacramento, and
principal archeologist for the Oroville Dam re-licensing project.
But some Maidu argue they already
know the history of their people, which has been passed down in stories through
generations. And some tribe members think questions of human behavior should be
answered by analyzing bones from other communities.
"They've been studying Native Americans
for hundreds of years," said Michael DeSpain, who is in charge of repatriation
efforts for Greenville Rancheria. "Let them go pick on another race now."
The cultural assessment of the
Oroville Dam will continue for years, Offermann said. Whether the divide
between tribes and the government will continue is a question that has no clear
answer.
"Our hope is that we're able to
continue a dialogue with them," Ramirez said, "because even though we're going
to get our license, and it may not be a license that contains things they
wanted to see, a continued discussion might allow us to find things that do
work for them."
DWR officials say their relationship
with Maidu tribes has grown closer. Monthly meetings of the Maidu Advisory
Council, a group that consists of members of different tribes in Oroville and
DWR officials, allow them to voice concerns.
Still, some Maidu don't feel like
their voices are heard.
"We voiced our opinion on a lot of
those issues and one of those issues was don't go digging," Angle said. "Did it
work? No. They're still digging."
Over the next 50 years of the new license,
the Maidu worry not only about the impact on their cultural sites, but the
effect of the dam on the environment. The dam has drastically changed the
ecological makeup of the Feather River and its wildlife.
Regardless of whether the digs are
fair to the Maidu, they are likely to continue for years to come. The resurrection
of the artifacts will continue to be a reminder of a civilization where the
earth was respected.
"If they don't correct the mistakes
they made they're going to hurt the human race," Angle said. "You can't keep
taking because there's going to be nothing left to take."
Jennifer MacDonald recently graduated from Chico
State with a degree in journalism. She can be reached at jenniferjmacdonald@gmail.com.