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PRESS
RELEASE
Office of the Secretary, DOI
For Release: February 18, 2000
Contact: Stephanie Hanna
(O)
202/501-4633
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INTERIOR
DEPARTMENT MAKES FINAL DECISION ON DNA ANALYSIS
The Department of the Interior announced today that
a decision has been made to conduct DNA analysis on the 9,000 year old
human skeletal remains known as Kennewick Man. The decision was made
by senior officials at the Interior Department following a number of
internal meetings and two recent consultations with representatives
from the five Indian tribes that claim Kennewick Man as their ancestor.
Representatives from the Interior Department, the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers and the Department of Justice met with tribal representatives
in Walla Walla, Washington, on February 11 and senior Interior officials
participated in a conference call with the tribes on February 16.
"DNA analysis will be useful to the Department in determining
if a shared group identity or cultural affiliation can be made between
these very ancient remains and Indian tribes that have historically
inhabited the Upper Plateau region in Washington State," Dr. Francis
P. McManamon, chief archaeologist of the National Park Service and chief
consulting archaeologist of the Department of the Interior said. "Experts
we have consulted on ancient DNA analysis have pointed out that the
procedures will be complex and time-consuming and may not provide conclusive
data. We feel, however, that it is worth the effort in this case because
of its peculiar circumstances to try to obtain genetic information.
The Kennewick Man case has been extraordinarily controversial since
the beginning and these bones were found in a river without any normal
archaeological context."
The Department has asked the U.S. District Court in
Oregon to grant an adequate time extension from a previously set March
24 deadline to arrange for appropriate scientific bone sample extraction
and laboratory analysis of DNA. The time extension would also allow
further input from the tribes that could assist the Interior Department
in determining cultural affiliation. In making this determination, the
Interior Department will use archaeological, ethnographic, linguistic,
biological and historical information and traditional stories of the
five claimant tribes as well as genetic information if the DNA analysis
is successful.
Kennewick
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