Tuesday, September 30, 2014

US Department of the Interior Bureau of Indian Affairs & Bureau of Indian Education

US Department of The Interior Bureau of Indian Affairs.

Bureau of Indian Education.

"the oldest bureau of the United States Department of the Interior. Established in 1824, IA currently provides services (directly or through contracts, grants, or compacts) to approximately 1.9 million American Indians and Alaska Natives. There are 566 federally recognized American Indian tribes and Alaska Natives in the United States. Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) is responsible for the administration and management of 55 million surface acres and 57 million acres of subsurface minerals estates held in trust by the United States for American Indian, Indian tribes, and Alaska Natives. Bureau of Indian Education (BIE) provides education services to approximately 42,000 Indian students. BIA and BIE’s missions are:

The Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) mission is to:
"… enhance the quality of life, to promote economic opportunity, and to carry out the responsibility to protect and improve the trust assets of American Indians, Indian tribes, and Alaska Natives."

The Bureau of Indian Education (BIE) mission is to:
"… provide quality education opportunities from early childhood through life in accordance with the tribes’ needs to cultural and economic well being in keeping with the wide diversity of Indian tribes and Alaska Native villages as distinct cultural and governmental entities. The Bureau considers the whole person (spiritual, mental, physical and cultural aspects.)" "
How Do I...
Frequently Asked Questions
For Parents and Students
Document Library
  • Guide to Tracing Your American Indian Ancestry
  • Tribal Leaders Directory
  • FR Notice- Indian Entities Recognized and Eligible to Receive Services from the US BIA
  • FR Notice- Indian Child Welfare Act; Designated Tribal Agents for the Service of Notice
  • Certificate of Degree of Indian or Alaska Native Blood Application and Instructions
  • American Indian Population and Labor Force Reports
  • Scholarships and Grants

Monday, September 29, 2014

Indian Yet Not 'An' Indian

June 26, 2014.
Chelsey Luger, of Indian Country Today, has written an interesting article about nuances in language which help describe varying degrees of respect.

"What’s the difference, and why does it matter?

It’s a subtlety in language that has the power to evoke varying degrees of respect. The indefinite article (a or an) should of course be used freely when referring to objects - like a candy bar,a book, or an orangutan. But it shouldn’t be used in front of an ethnicity, because it creates a demeaning connotation."

To read the full article, click here.

Friday, September 26, 2014

Traditional Archery Techniques & Ohio's Past

Video is Courtesy of the National Museum of the American Indian.
September 2, 2014.
Keevin Lewis, of the National Museum of the American Indian Blog, has written an interesting post about a recent workshop and demonstration about traditional bow and arrow construction in Arizona.

"The National Museum of the American Indian supported Royce’s project—his research into bows and arrows and other objects in the museum’s collections outside Washington, D.C., the workshop, and the reception—through the Artist Leadership Program."

To read the full post, click here.

August 3, 2013.
Much of Ohio's bow and arrow tradition is not archaeologically documented; because wood does not preserve well. Dr. Brad Lepper, of the Ohio History Connection's Archaeology Blog, has written an informative post about his research into the link between social complexity and archery with Ohio's ancient cultures.

"Ultimately, perhaps inevitably, the upward (or downward depending on your point of view) spiral of agricultural intensification and militarization – initiated by the adoption of the bow — resulted in the rise of centralized authority during the Mississippian period. And although there were no Mississippian temple mound centers in Ohio, Rob Cook’s research at SunWatchVillage in Dayton suggests it might only have been a matter of time before that level of socio-cultural complexity developed here, too. "

To read the full post, click here.

For more information,
Visit:

Thursday, September 25, 2014

Stonehenge Researchers Discover Site is Much Larger Than Previously Thought

Video Courtesy of the University of Birmingham.

The location of newly discovered monuments around Stonehenge.  Image Courtesy of Geert Verhoeven, University of Bi/PA and The Guardian.com.
The location of newly discovered monuments around Stonehenge.
Image Courtesy of Geert Verhoeven, University of Bi/PA and The Guardian.com.
September 9, 2014.
Ian Sample, of The Guardian, has written an interesting and very informative article about the recent discovery of a "series of hidden chapels, burial mounds, and ritual shrines" in the area surronding Stonehenge, an UNESCO World Heritage Site.

"Researchers uncovered 17 new chapels and hundreds of archaeological features around the neolithic standing stones on Salisbury Plain, Wiltshire, including forms of monuments that have never been seen before.
Brought together for the first time in a digital map of the historic site, the discoveries transform how archaeologists view a landscape that was reshaped by generations for hundreds of years after the first stones were erected around 3100BC."

To read the full article, click here.

For more information,
Visit:

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Autumn 2014 Newark Earthworks Center Events

Newark Earthworks Octagon.
Newark Earthworks, Octagon.
Autumn Semester: My Dream Show Exhibit by Candi Wesaw


Candi Wesaw is from Hartford, Michigan and a citizen of the Pokagon Band of Potawatomi Indian Nation. She has is deeply connected to her culture, heritage, and the arts. Ms. Wesaw works in multiple mediums and formats, including illustration, textiles, photography, and traditional native arts. She has also illustrated a series of children’s books about the Potawatomi, and is motivated
 to share her talent with youngsters to promote mutual cultural understandings. 

For more information about artist Candi Wesaw, click here.
Examples of her work can be found, here.

Newark, OH 43055

September 30, 2014: Lecture Series: The Newark Earthworks
and World Heritage

Lecture Series: The Newark Earthworks and World Heritage 2014 Flyer

Dr. Brad Lepper, of Ohio History Connection, will be giving a lecture about 
Why the Newark Earthworks Qualify for World Heritage: Universal Human Value.

Classroom 175, Warner Library
1219 University Drive
Newark, OH 43055

For more information, contact us at earthworks@osu.edu 
or at 740-364-9584.

October 7, 2014: Lecture Series: The Newark Earthworks 
and World Heritage

Lecture Series: The Newark Earthworks and World Heritage 2014 Flyer

Dr. Jarrod Burks, of Ohio Valley Archaeology, will be giving a lecture about 
Going High Tech to Study the Newark Earthworks: Putting Remote Sensing Tools to Work.

Classroom 175, Warner Library
1219 University Drive
Newark, OH 43055

For more information, contact us at earthworks@osu.edu 
or at 740-364-9584.

October 12, 2014: Octagon Open House
Octagon Open House Flyer October 2014

The grounds of the Octagon State Memorial will be open to the public
 for general strolling and viewing from sunrise to sunset.
Guided tours will be provided by the Newark Earthworks Center 
from 1-4 PM.
Special Guests Include:
 Candi Wesaw and other citizens of the Pokagon Band of Potawatomi Indian Nation.
Octagon State Memorial
125 N. 33rd St.
Newark OH 43055
For more information, contact us at earthworks@osu.edu .
If you would like to book a group tour, please call 740-364-9584.


October 12, 2014: Reception for My Dream Show 

by Candi Wesaw
7 PM.
Admissions is free and open to the public.
The art exhibit runs from August 27th through December 8th, 2014.

Candi Wesaw is from Hartford, Michigan and a citizen 
of the Pokagon Band of Potawatomi Indian Nation.
Wesaw is deeply connected to her culture, heritage, and the arts. 

She works in multiple mediums and formats; 
including illustrations, textiles, photography, 
and traditional native arts.


Newark, OH 43055

Refreshments will be served.

This event is graciously sponsored by: The Newark Earthworks Center- The Ohio State University at NewarkThe Pokagon Band of Potawatomi Indian NationThe American Indian Studies Program at The Ohio State UniversityThe Ohio History ConnectionThe Cultural Arts & Events Committee- The Ohio State University at Newark.

For more information, contact Dr. John Low, JD, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, 
Department of Comparative Studies at low.89@osu.edu 

Tours of the Great Circle Earthworks and Flint Ridge.
The Newark Earthworks Center employs four trained tour guides (two certified teachers & two Native Americans) who give tours for K-12 classes & other groups.
Admission is $5 per person except for teachers & aids.
Approximately 2, 500 school children participate each year.
For more information visit our Ancient Ohio Experience page or email us.
 Call 740-345-8224 to schedule a tour.

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Fourth World Journal

Fourth World Journal
"the world's leading publication for ideas and analysis about and by writers from some of the world's more than six thousand Fourth World nations. Leading activists and scholars contribute lively and informative articles and essays and reveal what otherwise often remains hidden."


Articles Include:
Winter 2014 Vol. 12, No. 2.
  • UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
Spring 2013 Vol. 12, No. 1
  • Barriers to Fair and Effective Congressional Representation in Indian Country
    • Dina Gilio-Whitaker
Autumn 2012 Vol. 11, No. 2.
  • Traditional Storytelling in the Digital Era
    • Janelle Palacios, Ph.D.; CNM
  • Increasing the Knowledge Base: Utilizing the GAIN in Culturally Sensitive Landscapes
    • Rodney C. Haring, Ph.D.; Janet Titus, Ph.D.; LaVerne H. Stevens, Ph.D.; Barbara D. Estrada, MS
  • Facilitating the Success of Native Investigators in Research Careers
    • Teshia G. Arambula Solomon, Ph.D.
Summer 2012 Vol. 11, No. 1.
  • Emptying the Cup: Healing Fragmented Identity- An Anishinawbekwe Perspective on Historical Trauma and Culturally Appropriate Consultation
    • S. Amy Desjarlais, MA
Summer 2011 Vol. 10, No. 1.
  • Expressions of Native Resiliency
    • Jennifer L. Penland, Ph.D.
  • US Consultation Policy
    • Rudolph C. Rÿser, Ph.D.

    Winter 2011 Vol. 10, No. 2.
    • Digitizing Worldviews Intangible Cultural Heritages
      • T. Anantha Vijayaah, Ph.D.
    • Participation in the WIPO Intergovernmental Committee on Intellectual Property, Genetic Resources, Traditional Knowledge, and Folklore
      • Grand Council of the Crees (Eeyou Istchee)
    Winter 2010 Vol. 9, No. 2.
    • Comments and Recommendations on the United States Review of the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
      •  Rudolph C. Rÿser, Ph.D.
     August 1999 Vol. 4, No. 1.
    • Living Anishnabe
      • Allen Gabriel
    • Long-Term Strategies for Institutional Change in University and Colleges: Negotiating Native Peoples' Middle Ground
      • Rodney Bobiwash

    Monday, September 22, 2014

    President Obama Visits Stonehenge

    September, 2014.
    The Telegraph and The Guardian have both written interesting articles about President Obama's recent visit to Stonehenge, an UNESCO World Heritage site
    Each article has unique informative features.

    "[President Obama]described the atmosphere around the stones as 'really special' and his visit to Stonehenge as 'a highlight of my tour'."



    -The Guardian.

    For more information,
    Visit:

    Friday, September 19, 2014

    The Treaty of Greene Ville

    The Greenville Treaty Line established new western boundaries for the United States in 1797 and established peace between the United States of American and the tribal nations of the "Wyandots, Delawares, Shawanees, Ottawas, Chippewas, Pattawatimas, Miamis, Eel Rivers, Weas, Kickapoos, Piankeshaws, and Kaskaskias" following the Battle of Fallen Timbers.
    Fort Recovery State Museum will be hosting a dedication ceremony "where a sycamore tree might have stood more than 200 years ago" and was a "starting point for laying out the Greenville Treaty Line". The public is invited to this memorable event

    Sunday, September 28th, 2014.
    1 PM.
    Fort Loramie, OH 45845

    Concluding at Gigandet Farm

    Speakers Include:
    • Ken Sowards 
      • on the impact the treaty had on the United States
    • Dr. Steven Littleton 
      • on Native American History before the treaty
    • Greg Shipley 
      • on the archaeological discoveries on the Fleckenstein Farm
    • James Williams 
      • on the surveyor Israel Ludlow
    Line of Treaty within the Western Reserve.  Image Courtesy of The West Virginia Encyclopedia.
    Line of Treaty within the Western Reserve.
    Image Courtesy of The West Virginia Encyclopedia.
    For more information,
    Visit:




    Thursday, September 18, 2014

    Stonehenge 'Complete Circle' Evidence Found

    Stonehenge with parch marks during July 2013.  Image Courtesy of English Heritage and BBC News.
    Stonehenge with parch marks during July 2013.
    Image Courtesy of English Heritage and BBC News.
    August 30, 2014.
    BBC News has written about recently discovered parch marks at Stonehenge, an UNESCO World Heritage Site. These parch marks seen during last July suggest the stone circle was once complete which is a new discovery for the site.

    "Tim Daw, who spotted the parch marks, said: "I was standing on the public path looking at the grass near the stones and thinking that we needed to find a longer hosepipe to get the parched patches to green up... A sudden lightbulb moment in my head, and I remembered that the marks were where archaeologists had looked without success for signs that there had been stone holes, and that parch marks can signify them." "

    To read the full article, click here.

    For more information,
    Visit:

    Wednesday, September 17, 2014

    Be it resolved by the House of Representatives of the State of Ohio...


    June 2014.

    "Be it resolved by the House of Representatives of the State of Ohio (The Senate concurring):

    WHEREAS, American Indians have made and continue to make significant contributions towards shaping Ohio into the great state that it is today. The ancient cultures built monumental earthworks in Ohio encoded with astronomical alignments that have captured the world's attention, and many of Ohio's geographic features and cities have historic Native American Indian names; and

    WHEREAS, American Indians who have contributed to the rich history and culture of our state include the members of the ancient cultures now known as the Adena, Hopewell, and Fort Ancient, and historic tribes that include the Shawnee, Miami, Delaware, Potawatomi, Seneca, Wyandot, Peoria, and Ottawa; and

    WHEREAS, American Indians have made an indelible mark on the landscape, history, and culture of Ohio. Today, many American Indians call Ohio "home," working and raising their families here; and

    WHEREAS, American Indians living in Ohio can be justifiably proud of their rich heritage, spirituality, and traditions. It is important that they receive encouragement from the state's elected officials to continue teaching their culture to their children and sharing it with their fellow Ohioans; now therefore be it

    RESOLVED, That we, the members of the 130th General Assembly of the State of Ohio, designate the fourth week of September as "American Indian Week," in conjunction with "American Indian Day" on the fourth Saturday of September, to honor the significant influence that American Indians have had on Ohio and to encourage the teaching and sharing of their culture; and be it further

    RESOLVED, That the Clerk of the House of Representatives transmit duly authenticated copies of this resolution to the news media of Ohio."


    For more information, 
    Visit:

    Tuesday, September 16, 2014

    Earthworks Sites' Radiocarbon Dates -Databases

    "A total of 1919 radiocarbon dates for archaeological sites and objects in Kentucky, Ohio and West Virginia has been compiled by the Council For West Virginia Archaeology. These data represent most radiocarbon dates available for the region up to August 1996. The database is presented in a tabular format in ascending order of radiocarbon age. The database includes site numbers, site names, components, time periods, lab numbers, radiocarbon age, sigma, calibrated age and references."
    "the radiocarbon database represents many years of cooperation between professional and amateur archaeologists as well as universities, agencies and private consulting firms. It should be stressed that even though this is a final publication this database should be viewed as a working document that will be continuously updated and corrected…"

    • Alligator Mound, OH
    • Anderson Earthwork, IN
    • Armitage Mound, OH
    • Auvergne Mound, KY
    • Bagley Mound, OH
    • Bills Creek Mound, WV
    • Black Dog Mound, OH
    • Bob Evans Mound, OH
    • Byler/Buyler Mound, OH
    • Camargo Mound, KY
    • Carmargo Mound, KY
    • Clough Mound, OH
    • Connett Mound, OH
    • Consol Mound
    • Cotinga Mound, WV
    • Cowan Creek Mound, OH
    • Cresap Mound, WV
    • Daines Mound, OH
    • Dover Mound, KY
    • Drake Mound, KY
    • Earl DeLong Mound, OH
    • Ennis Mound, OH/WV?
    • Enos Holmes Mound, OH
    • Esch Mound, OH
    • Fairchance Mound, OH
    • Florence Mound, OH
    • Gaines Mound, KY
    • Galbreath Mound, OH
    • Gerlack Mound, OH
    • Glenford Fort Stone Mound, OH
    • Grave Creek Mound, WV
    • Hartman Mound, KY
    • Henderson Mound, OH
    • Hines Mound, OH
    • Hopewell Mound Group, OH
    • Ighram Mound, WV
    • James Chase Hambleton Mound, OH
    • James Star Mound, OH
    • Kern Effigy?, OH
    • Kirk Mound, WV
    • Kline Mound, OH
    • Kohl Mound, OH
    • LaMoreaux Mound, OH
    • Leslie Mound, WV
    • Liberty Earthworks/Edwin Harness Mound, OH
    • McCabe Mound, KY
    • McCoy Mound, OH
    • Miskimens/Maxwell Mound, OH
    • Morgan Stone Mound, KY
    • Mound City, OH
    • Murad Mound, WV
    • Nashport Mound, OH
    • Newark Works: Great Circle, OH
    • Newark Works: Octagon, OH
    • Newman Mound, WV
    • Oak Mound, WV
    • O.C. Voss Mound, OH
    • Phillips Mound
    • Phillip Smith Mound, OH
    • Philo Group, OH
    • Pollock Works, OH
    • Rock Riffle Run Mound, OH
    • Robbins Mound, KY
    • Russell Brown Mound
    • Rutledge Mound, OH
    • Sayler Park/Merk Mound, OH
    • Seip Earthworks, OH
    • Thruman DeLong Mound, OH
    • Todd Mound, OH
    • Toepfner Mound, OH
    • Tremper Mound, OH
    • Turk Mound
    • Twin Mounds, KY
    • Viney Branch Mound, KY
    • Waterworks Mound, OH
    • Wickliffe, KY
    • William H. Davis Mound, OH
    • William Schultz Mound, OH
    • Whittlesey Earthwork, OH
    • Wright Mound, KY
    • Yant Mound, OH
    • Young Mound, WV

    "a compilation of radiocarbon measurements that indicate the ages of archaeological and vertebrate palaeontological sites in North America. During the 50 years since the method of radiocarbon dating was invented, archaeologists and palaeontologists have invested heavily in this method, acquiring tens of thousands of radiocarbon dates. These dates represent a substantial financial investment, but their potential for developing the chronology of archaeology and palaeontology remains under-utilized and in some respects misused. The dates are widely scattered in published and unpublished sources, and many have not been reported at all. Furthermore, the dates are not all created equal, as they represent the results of analytical methods and techniques that have evolved over a 50-year period."

    • Alligator Mound, OH
    • Armitage Mound, OH
    • Arthur James Mound, OH
    • Augustine Mound, New Brunswick, Canada 
    • Bills Creek Mound, WV
    • Black Dog Mound, OH
    • Bob Evans Mound, OH
    • Boven Earthworks, MI 
    • Byler/ Buyler Mound, OH
    • Carmargo Mound, KY
    • Clough Mound, OH
    • Connett Mound, OH
    • Cotinga Mound, WV
    • Cowan Creek Mound, OH
    • Cresap Mound, WV
    • Daines Mound, OH
    • Drake Mound, KY
    • Earl DeLong Mound, OH
    • Enos Holmes Mound, OH
    • Esch Mound, OH
    • Fidler Mounds, Manitoba, Canada 
    • Florence Mound, OH
    • Gaines Mound, KY
    • Galbreath Mound, OH
    • Gerlack Mound, OH
    • Glenford Fort Stone Mound, OH
    • Grave Creek Mound, WV
    • Hartman Mound, KY
    • Heath Mound, Manitoba, Canada 
    • Henderson Mound, OH
    • Hilltop Mounds, OH
    • Hines Mound, OH
    • Hopewell Mound Group, OH
    • Ighram Mound, WV
    • James Chase Hambleton Mound, OH
    • James Starr Mound, OH
    • Kern Effigy, OH 
    • Kirk Mound, WV
    • Kline Mound, OH
    • Kohl Mound, OH
    • Gaines Mound, KY
    • LaMoreaux Mound, OH
    • Lane Enclosure, IA
    • Leslie Mound, WV
    • LeVesconte Mound, Ontario, Canada
    • Liberty Earthworks/Edwin Harness Mound, OH
    • Linseman-Walters Earthwork, MI
    • Mikado Earthwork Enclosure, MI
    • Miskimens/Maxwell Mound, OH
    • McCabe Mound, KY
    • McCoy Mound, OH
    • Morgan Stone Mound, KY
    • Mound City Group, OH 
    • Murad Mound, WV
    • Nashport Mound, OH
    • Newark Works: Great Circle, OH 
    • Newark Works: Octagon, OH 
    • Newman Mound, WV
    • Oak Mound, WV
    • O.C. Voss Mound, OH
    • Phillip Smith Mound, OH
    • Philo Group, OH
    • Pollock Works, OH 
    • Prince Mound, Ontario, Canada 
    • Robbins Mound, KY
    • Riverview Mound, Manitoba, Canada 
    • Rix Mills Enclosure, OH
    • Rock Rifle Run Mound, OH
    • Rutledge Mound, OH
    • Sayler Park/ Merk Mound, OH
    • Seid Mound, OH
    • Seip Earthworks, OH
    • Serpent Mound, OH
    • Serpent Mounds, Ontario, Canada 
    • St. James Mound, Manitoba, Canada 
    • Star Mound, Manitoba, Canada 
    • Stott Mound, Manitoba, Canada 
    • Thurman DeLong Mound, OH
    • Todd Mound, OH
    • Toepfner Mound, OH
    • Tremper Mound, OH
    • Tsolum River Mound, British Columbia, Canada 
    • Turkey Creek Mound, WV
    • Twin Mounds, KY
    • Viney Branch Mound, KY
    • Waterworks Mound, OH
    • Watson Farm Mound, WV
    • William H. Davis Mound, OH
    • William Schultz Mound, OH
    • Willow Island Mound, WV
    • Welcome Mound, WV
    • Wickliffe, KY
    • Whittlesey Mound, OH
    • Whorley Earthwork, MI
    • Wright Mound, KY 
    • Yant Mound, OH
    *But not limited to.

    For more information about radiocarbon dating, 
    Visit:

    Wednesday, September 10, 2014

    OSU Archaeological Field School in Dublin, OH


    Ohio State University students are shown above in WOSU TV's documentary
     on Columbus Neighborhoods: Clintonville. 
    April 2014.
    The Ohio State University Department of Anthropology's archaeology field school teaches students  how to be responsible archaeologists in the field and how to discover history left behind on the land. The video above documents the students' efforts in cultural resource management before a potential road extension is constructed.

    To view the full documentary, click here.

    What is Cultural Resource Management?
    "Cultural resource management (CRM) refers to the processes and procedures used to manage, preserve, protect, and conserve cultural resources in compliance with state and federal regulations. Each year a wealth of archaeological data are generated through CRM in efforts to prevent the loss of information from an untold number of archaeological sites, architecture, landscapes, and other cultural resources. A number of state and federal laws mandate CRM projects. These laws require identification and recording of cultural resources that are potentially eligible for inclusion on the National Register of Historic Places, before impact by construction projects funded or licensed by federal and/or state agencies."
    - New York State Museum.

    For more information,
    Visit:

    Tuesday, September 9, 2014

    Virtual First Ohians

    Virtual First Ohians

    This site represents an online exhibit of the Ohio History Connection including images, timelines, and videos representing a comprehensive overlook of Ohio's first residents.
    *Note: Dates may vary around 100 years above and below given date for cultures prior to AD 1650 due to regional differences and margin of error in dating techniques. Dates are taken from the Ohio History Central Encyclopedia.

    "In the Eastern United States, Indian cultures existing before the coming of the Europeans and their written language have been organized into four basic groupings: Paleoindian, Archaic, Woodland, and Late Prehistoric. These groups are defined by basic patterns of settlements, economy, and artifacts spread over a fairly large region. While the groups generally followed each other in time, they also overlapped somewhat."

    Ohio History Connection

    Friday, September 5, 2014

    Illuminating the Treaties That Have Governed U.S. - Indian Relationships

    In 1794, President Washington commissioned a wampum belt for the Canadaigua Treaty. Image Courtesy of Cliff Owen/AP Images and Smithsonian.com.
    In 1794, President Washington commissioned a wampum belt for the Canadaigua Treaty.
    Image Courtesy of Cliff Owen/AP Images and Smithsonian.com.
    September 2014.
    Smithsonian has written a brief new article summarizing some of the treaties between Native Nations and the United States.

    "The so-called Calico Treaty, one of the earliest the U.S. entered into, is still in force: Every July, the Bureau of Indian Affairs dispatches what amounts to a square yard of cloth per tribal citizen to the tribes (except the Mohawks, because the U.S. has come to believe that no Mohawk leaders were present at the treaty’s signing)."

    To read the full article, click here.

    For more information about treaties,
    Visit:

    What Lies Beneath Stonehenge

    The huge bluestones each weigh between four and eight tons  and were brought to the site from North Wales, 170 miles away.  Photo Courtesy of Henrik Knudsen, English Heritage, and Smithsonian.com.
    The huge bluestones each weigh between four and eight tons
    and were brought to the site from North Wales, 170 miles away.
    Photo Courtesy of Henrik Knudsen, English Heritage, and Smithsonian.com.
    September 2014.
    Smithsonian Magazine has published a thought-provoking article about new discoveries around Stonehenge, a famous UNESCO World Heritage site in England. Recent research has focused on placing Stonehenge within its landscape using new magnetic, radar, and geophysical data.

    "Gaffney’s latest research effort, the Stonehenge Hidden Landscapes Project, is a four-year collaboration between a British team and the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Archaeological Prospection and Virtual Archaeology in Austria that has produced the first detailed underground survey of the area surrounding Stonehenge, totaling more than four square miles. The results are astonishing. The researchers have found buried evidence of more than 15 previously unknown or poorly understood late Neolithic monuments: henges, barrows, segmented ditches, pits. To Gaffney, these findings suggest a scale of activity around Stonehenge far beyond what was previously suspected."

    To read the full article, click here.

    For more information about Stonehenge, 
    Magnetometers, Ground- Penetrating Radar, 
    or World Heritage, Visit:

    Thursday, September 4, 2014

    Povert Point: Preservation of a Prehistoric World Heritage Site

    Aerial Photo of Poverty Point.  Image Courtesy of Susan Guice and the NEH.
    Aerial Photo of Poverty Point.
    Image Courtesy of Susan Guice and the NEH.
    August 7, 2014.
    Ralph Canevali, of the National Endowment for the Humanities, has written an informative article about the history, preservation, and future of Poverty Point State Historic Site, located in northeastern Louisiana. Poverty Point was recently added to the UNESCO World Heritage List and marks the 22nd World Heritage site in the U.S.

    "Poverty Point was part of a larger cultural complex of mound builders that extended throughout the lower Mississippi River valley. Despite excavations that have uncovered stone tools, pottery, and other artifacts at Poverty Point, relatively little is known about the people who built the mounds. They were not farmers, but rather subsisted through hunting, gathering, and fishing. However, they also obtained goods from as far afield as the southern Appalachians and the upper Midwest."

    To read the full article, click here.

    National Endowment for the Humanities.

    For more information about 
    Poverty Point or World Heritage,
    Visit:

    Wednesday, September 3, 2014

    New Geoglyphs Found in Nazca Desert After Sandstorm

    Image Courtesy of Elcomercio and Phys.Org.
    Image Courtesy of Elcomercio and Phys.Org.
    August 7, 2014.
    Phys.Org has written a brief article about new geoglyphs found in the Nazca desert after recent sand-storms.

    "The newly revealed figures discovered by de la Torre are of a snake (approximately 196 feet in length), a bird, a camelid (perhaps a llama) and some zig-zag lines. They are actually on some hills in the El Ingenio Valley and Pampas de Jumana near the  floor. Archeologists have been alerted to authenticate the find."

    To read the full article, click here.

    For more information about the Nazca Lines, 
    Visit: