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Puha Flows from It: The Spring Mountains Cultural Landscape Study PresentationStoffle, Richard W., Chmara-Huff, Fletcher, Van Vlack, Kathleen, Toupal, Rebecca January 2004 (has links)
This presentation was prepared and given during a meeting in 2004 between the United States Forest Service, Southern Paiute tribal members, and the BARA research team. The power point presents the summary of key findings from the report entitled Puha Flows from It: The Spring Mountains Cultural Landscape Study.
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Big Springs Ethnographic Study PhotographsStoffle, Richard W., Amato, John January 1998 (has links)
This is a slide show of selected photographs from the Big Springs Ethnographic Assessment US-95 Corridor Study.
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Testimony of Richard StoffleStoffle, Richard W. 01 May 2014 (has links)
No description available.
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Paiute Cowboy01 May 2014 (has links)
No description available.
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In defense of self identity and place in Pyramid Lake Paiute history /Foley, Justin R. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Nevada, Reno, 2008. / "December 2008." Includes bibliographical references (leaves 138-145). Online version available on the World Wide Web.
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Native American Cultural Resource Studies at Yucca Mountain, Nevada (Monograph)Stoffle, Richard W., Halmo, David, Olmsted, John, Evans, Michael January 1990 (has links)
This report integrates and summarizes findings from the 1987 and 1988 Native American cultural resource studies related to the Yucca Mountain high level radioactive waste isolation facility. The purposes of the report are to describe the traditional cultural values associated with the Cultural Studies Area, describe the methods used in the research, and provide a theoretical discussion of the role of cultural resources in American Indian groups' past and contemporary society
(DOE 1988:3 -9).
Findings from these Native American cultural resource studies are presented in what are termed "interim reports." Each of these were submitted for concurrent review by the sixteen involved American Indian tribes, Science Applications International Corporation, and the Department of Energy. This report is based on five reports, including three interim reports.
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Native American Plant Resources in the Yucca Mountain Area, NevadaStoffle, Richard W., Evans, Michael, Halmo, David 11 1900 (has links)
This report presents Native American interpretations of and concerns for plant resources on or near Yucca Mountain, Nevada. This is one of three research reports regarding Native
American cultural resources that may be affected by site characterization activities related to the Yucca Mountain high -level radioactive waste disposal facility.
Representatives of the sixteen involved American Indian tribes identified and interpreted
plant resources as part of a consultation relationship between themselves and the U.S.
Department of Energy (DOE). This report integrates data from the ethnobotanical fieldwork and visits conducted over a three -week period. The bulk of this report divides plants into their logical components: plant parts used; places where used; purposes of uses; and persons who used, do use, and will use the plants. The remainder of this Introduction is devoted to conveying an American Indian holistic perspective on plants as a part of the world.
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Literature Review and Ethnohistory of Native American Occupancy and Use of the Yucca Mountain AreaStoffle, Richard W., Olmsted, John, Evans, Michael 01 1900 (has links)
This report presents a review of the literature concerning Native American occupancy and use of the Yucca Mountain area and vicinity. It draws on a wide range of material, including early traveler reports, government documents, ethnographic and historical works, and local newspapers. The report complements two other concurrent studies, one focused on the cultural resources of Native American people in the study area and the other an ethnobotanical study of plant resources used by Native American people in the study area. Both concurrent studies are based on interviews with Native American people.
The literature review was designed to contribute to the understanding of the presence of Native American people in the Yucca Mountain area. A review of the existing literature about the Yucca Mountain area and southern Nye County, supplemented by the broader literature about the Great Basin, has verified three aspects of the study design. First, the review has aided in assessing the completeness of the list of Native American ethnic groups that have traditional or historical ties to the site. Second, it has aided in the production of a chronology of Native American activities that occurred on or near the site during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Third, it has helped to identify the location of cultural resources, including burials and other archaeological sites, in the study area and vicinity.
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Native American Interpretation of Cultural Resources in the Area of Yucca Mountain, NevadaStoffle, Richard W., Evans, Michael, Harshbarger, Camilla 03 1900 (has links)
The Yucca Mountain region was used by Owens Valley Paiute, Western Shoshone, and Southern Paiute people for thousands of years. The area contains numerous plants, animals, and sacred resources traditionally used by these people. This report presents the location and interpretation of Native American cultural resources on or near Yucca Mountain, Nevada. This work built upon the archaeological reconnaissance and identifications of cultural resources by the Desert Research Institute. Interpretations provided by Native American Indian people are not intended to refute other scientific studies, such as botanical, wildlife, and archaeological studies. Rather, they provide additional hypotheses for future studies, and they provide a more complete cultural understanding of the Yucca Mountain area.
Representatives of sixteen American Indian tribes identified the cultural value of these resources as part of a consultation relationship with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE).
This interim report is to be used to review research procedures and findings regarding (1) initial consultation with the sixteen tribes, (2) in -depth interviews with tribal elders, and (3) findings from the first on -site visit with representatives of the sixteen tribes.
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Paa’oatsa Hunuvi (Water Bottle Canyon): American Indian Rapid Cultural Assessment of Archaeological Site 26NY10133, Nevada Test SiteArnold Richard, Cloquet Don, Cornelius Betty L., Frank Maurice, Moose Gaylene, Stoffle, Richard, Dewey -Hefley Genevieve 28 September 1998 (has links)
This is a report of findings from an American Indian Rapid Cultural Assessment that was conducted in 1997. The focus of the study is a location on the Nevada Test Site (NTS) where the Kistler Aerospace Corporation proposes to build a launch site for a communications satellite. As such, this is a rapid cultural assessment of Water Bottle Canyon on which construction is expected in the near future. The purpose of this study is to summarize American Indian cultural resources, as these exist on and near to site 26NY10133 and to consider potential mitigation strategies. This report is a summary of the cultural assessments made by members of the American Indian Writers Subgroup (AIWS) which is representing in this study the cultural resource interests of the 17 tribes and 3 Indian organizations that constitute the CGTO.
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