NYT’s: Energy Exploration Threatens Indian Artifacts

From the NYTs:

DOLORES, Colo. — The dusty documentation of the Anasazi Indians a thousand years ago, from their pit houses and kivas to the observatories from which they charted the heavens, lies thick in the ground near here at Canyons of the Ancients National Monument.

Or so archaeologists believe. Less than a fifth of the park has been surveyed for artifacts because of limited federal money.

Much more definite is that a giant new project to drill for carbon dioxide is gathering steam on the park’s eastern flank. Miles of green pipe snake along the roadways, as trucks ply the dirt roads from a big gas compressor station. About 80 percent of the monument’s 164,000 acres is leased for energy development.

The consequences of energy exploration for wildlife and air quality have long been contentious in unspoiled corners of the West. But now with the urgent push for even more energy, there are new worries that history and prehistory — much of it still unexplored or unknown — could be lost.

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Justin Richland on Hopi Inheritance Law

Justin Richland has published “The State of Hopi Exception: When Inheritance is What You Have” in Law & Literature. Here is the abstract:

This essay asks after the potentialities and desires generated by the epistemological limits that animate Hopi tradition as a mode of inheritance. Every effort by Euro-Americans to give “order” to Hopis via two dominant modalities of modern intervention–law and science–have regularly and repeatedly confronted their exceptions among aspects of Hopi life. It will be argued that the obdurate qualities that Hopi culture, society, and language present to Euro-American ways of knowing resonate with tropes of tradition and its inheritance generated by and between Hopis themselves, revealing that Hopis operate in something like a state of exception where their negotiation of epistemological limits animate potentialities that exceed their own moments of authoritative prescription, generating a largely dispersed sovereignty. Moreover, as the lines and limits by which this Hopi exceptionalism is generated and dispersed come to give Hopi traditional knowledge the form of property, and its transmission the character of inheritance, they produce a nostalgic, possessory desire among Euro-Americans to “know” Hopis, even as (and arguably because) these limits result in a Hopi sociality that defies the techno-rational modes of production that reside at the heart of contemporary Euro-American state orders.

Emory Sekaquaptewa Obit in the LA Times

Here.

Emory Sekaquaptewa

Created dictionary of Hopi language

Emory Sekaquaptewa, 78, an anthropologist, judge and artist who was called the “Noah Webster of the Hopi Nation,” died Dec. 14, the University of Arizona announced.

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US Attorney for D. Ariz. Confirmed

From Indianz:

Hopi woman confirmed as U.S. Attorney for Arizona

Friday, December 14, 2007
Filed Under: Politics

Diane Humetewa, a member of the Hopi Tribe of Arizona, has been confirmed as the U.S. Attorney for Arizona.

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Indian Woman Nominated to be USA for D. Ariz.

From Indianz:

Hopi woman nominated as US Attorney for Arizona

Friday, November 16, 2007

Diane J. Humetewa, a member of the Hopi Tribe of Arizona, has been nominated as the U.S. Attorney for Arizona.

Humetewa told the Associated Press she was “extremely honored” to be nominated. President Bush sent her nomination to the Senate yesterday. Humetewa was recommended for the job by Sens. John McCain (R) and Jon Kyl (R) after Paul Charlton, the former U.S. Attorney, was fired by the Bush administration last December. But Bush passed over Humetewa when he appointed an interim U.S. Attorney in February. Humetewa has worked for the Department of Justice, the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Arizona and for McCain during his two tenures as chairman of the Senate Indian Affairs Committee. If confirmed by the Senate, se would be the first Native American and first Native woman to serve as U.S. Attorney for Arizona.

Get the Story:
Bush taps Hopi for Ariz.’s U.S. attorney (The Arizona Republic 11/16)

Press Release: McCAIN, KYL URGE SENATE JUDICIARY COMMITTEE TO SWIFTLY VOTE ON THE NOMINATION OF DIANE HUMETEWA AS ARIZONA DISTRICT U.S. ATTORNEY (McCain/Kyl 11/15)