Ethnographic research has moved to a more prominent position within cultural resources management studies due to the enactment of AIRFA and NAGPRA, the issuance of Executive Order 13007 (Indian Sacred Sites), and the political activism of Native Americans. Documenting traditional cultural properties, assessing the potential impacts of proposed federal actions on sacred sites and traditional cultural properties, and determining cultural affiliation require the skills of an ethnographer. Equally important is an approach that is both sensitive to the subject community and focused on an objective assessment of the data. Our team has experience in:
The
Apache prisoner-of-war project, funded by the Legacy Program, was a
unique study combining the results of ethnographic, ethnohistorical,
and archaeological investigations. Historical/archival
investigations were conducted at several repositories, including the
National Archives and Records Administration and the Library of
Congress in Washington, D.C. Ethnographic data were collected, and
interviews were conducted with six former prisoners of war, who were
living at the time of this project, and with 10 first-generation
descendants. Archaeological recording of the former sites of the
villages was conducted.
A close working relationship with members of the Chiricahua/Warm Springs Fort Sill Apache Tribe and employment of a tribal member as a consultant and researcher culminated in both an extensive, in-depth analysis of an event that had previously received little scholarly attention and the preservation of historic sites important in the history of U.S./Native American interaction. The project’s primary purpose was to nominate the 12 former Apache prisoner-of-war village sites (identified through archival and archaeological research conducted by GMI) at Fort Sill Military Reservation for inclusion in the NRHP.
Ethnographic and ethnohistorical research was conducted to determine the existence and potential impact to traditional cultural properties (TCPs) and sacred sites of a proposed military flight (bomber) training corridor across central Utah. After ethnohistorical research, consultations were arranged with members of the Paiute and Ute tribes to solicit their concern for TCPs and sacred sites. Subsequent consultations were arranged between representatives of Air Combat Command and members of the Paiute and Ute tribes. The successful implementation of the consultation and early input from Native American tribes enabled Air Combat Command, the Paiute, and Ute to establish an alternative training corridor that was less likely to impact areas of concern to the Paiute and Ute, yet still meet the needs of Air Combat Command.
The primary objective of this project was to document the history of
ranching families associated with historic sites located on Holloman
AFB. The project involved accumulating a comprehensive list of
pre-military historic sites on Holloman AFB and associating their
location with pre-1942 grazing allotment boundaries. Based on these
and archival data, local informants who were associated with these
historic properties were located and interviewed (audio and video)
to learn about the early ranching and farming history of the
Tularosa Basin and the material remains these activities left
behind. These data were then used to re-evaluate the NRHP
eligibility of previously recorded historic sites on Holloman AFB.