"It was clear from the moment Jim Chatters first saw the partial skeleton that no crime had been committed--none recent enough to be prosecutable, anyway. Chatters, a forensic anthropologist, had been called in by the coroner of Benton County, Wash., to consult on some bones found by two college students on the banks of the Columbia River, near the town of Kennewick. The bones were obviously old, and when the coroner asked for an opinion, Chatters' off-the-cuff guess, based on the skull's superficially Caucasoid features, was that they probably belonged to a settler from the late 1800s.
Then a CT scan revealed a stone spear point embedded in the skeleton's pelvis, so Chatters sent a bit of finger bone off to the University of California at Riverside for radiocarbon dating. When the results came back, it was clear that his estimate was dramatically off the mark. The bones weren't 100 or even 1,000 years old. They belonged to a man who had walked the banks of the Columbia more than 9,000 years ago.
In short, the remains that came to be known as Kennewick Man were almost twice as old as the celebrated Iceman discovered in 1991 in an Alpine glacier, and among the oldest and most complete skeletons ever found in the Americas. Plenty of archaeological sites date back that far, or nearly so, but scientists have found only about 50 skeletons of such antiquity, most of them fragmentary. Any new find can thus add crucial insight into the ongoing mystery of who first colonized the New World--the last corner of the globe to be populated by humans. Kennewick Man could cast some much needed light on the murky questions of when that epochal migration took place, where the first Americans originally came from and how they got here."
Get the Story:
Who Were The First Americans?
(Time 3/13)
NAGPRA Amendment Bill:
S.536:
Technical Corrections Act
Court Decision:
BONNICHSEN
v. US (February 4, 2004)
Relevant Links:
Kennewick Man, Department of Interior - http://www.cr.nps.gov/aad/kennewick
Friends of America's Past - http://www.friendsofpast.org
Kennewick Man Virtual Interpretive Center, The Tri-City (Washington) Herald
- http://www.kennewick-man.com
Related Stories:
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(3/6)
Science Snapshot:
Study of Kennewick Man (2/28)
Scientists
continue study of Kennewick Man remains (2/24)
Kennewick Man's teeth may tell true age of
remains (02/02)
Bush administration
opposes NAGPRA amendment (07/29)
Listening Lounge: Senate hearing on
repatriation (07/28)
Editorial: Science
trumps Native repatriation (7/27)
Senate
Indian Affairs Committee hearings (7/25)
Editorial: McCain should drop NAGPRA amendment
(7/20)
Scientists wrap up work on
Kennewick Man remains (7/19)
Kennewick
Man scientists fear NAGPRA amendment (7/15)
Scientists begin study of Kennewick Man remains
(7/11)
NAGPRA amendment up for hearing
in Senate (07/06)
Column: Hearing slated
on two-word change to NAGPRA (06/24)
Scientists get ready to study Kennewick Man
(6/21)
Tribe says NAGPRA amendment will
right a wrong (04/19)
Opinion: McCain
bill will block study of ancient remains (04/14)
Scientists oppose McCain bill to change NAGPRA
(04/08)
Panel approves Native Hawaiian,
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NAGPRA change up
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Tribes seek role in Kennewick Man proceedings
(02/16)
Campbell-backed bill adds two words
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Battle over Kennewick
Man study far from over (08/02)
Editorial: Let Kennewick Man speak! (say what?)
(07/22)
Column: Kennewick Man belongs to
everyone (7/21)
Tribes to seek
restrictions on Kennewick Man study (7/20)
Tribes drop Kennewick Man claim in court (7/20)
Repatriation process criticized at Senate
hearing (07/15)
Editorial: It's about
time Kennewick Man case ends (04/29)
Tribes debate next step in Kennewick Man case
(04/27)
Kennewick rehearing denied
(4/21)
Court rules scientists can
study Kennewick Man (02/05)
Kennewick Man battle back in court (9/8)
Tribes file opening brief
in Kennewick Man case (03/19)
Appeals court asked to stop
Kennewick Man tests (01/23)
Norton treads uncharted waters over
remains (4/11)
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