A3 THE DAILY ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 2019 Piece of sacred meteorite returned to tribe By ERIN ROSS Oregon Public Broadcasting A small piece of Ore- gon’s most storied rock added a chapter to its his- tory Friday when the Ever- green Aviation & Space Museum in McMinnville returned it to the Confeder- ated Tribes of Grand Ronde. The meteorite Toma- nowos, also referred to as the Willamette Meteor- ite, formed about 4.5 bil- lion years ago, at the start of the solar system. For an unknown amount of time it sped around the sun before falling to Earth. Thirteen thousand years ago, glacial fl oods carried it to the Wil- lamette Valley, near the city of West Linn. A little over a hundred years ago, it was donated to the American Museum of Natural History in New York City, and a few small chunks were sliced off and sold. And on Friday, a 4.5 ounce piece of the sacred meteorite fi nally returned home. Cheryle A. Kennedy, Grand Ronde tribal chair- woman, says she felt over- whelmed by the event. “The representation of a piece of the meteorite being brought back to the people is also representative to us that healing is occurring with us,” she said. “That all the parts are being returned, and we as a people can come home as well.” Tomanowos is over 30,000 pounds , mak- ing it the largest meteor- ite found in North America and the sixth-largest in the world. Comprised of iron and nickel, scientists think it may have formed when a long-gone planet shat- tered. Because of its large Hillsboro man arraigned on rape, sex abuse charges her home without the knowledge or consent of her parents. A Hillsboro man Offi cers later deter- found with a teenage mined Knox may have girl in a snow- sexually abused bound vehi- the girl near her cle earlier this home in King month pleaded County, Wash- ington, and not guilty Mon- arrested him for day to sec- second-degree ond-degree rape attempted rape. and fi rst-degree Christopher More infor- sexual abuse . Thomas mation about The Clatsop Knox the case was County Sheriff’s revealed during Offi ce fi rst made investigation contact with Christo- further pher Thomas Knox, and led a grand jury 37, after he called to to indict Knox on sec- request help getting ond-degree rape and sexual his rental car out of fi rst-degree the snow near the Gnat abuse, Deputy District Creek Campground Attorney Beau Peter- along U.S. Highway 30. son said. He was also When they arrived, charged with luring a deputies found through minor and online sex- further investigation ual corruption of a child that the 13-year-old girl in the fi rst degree. Knox’s bail was set Knox originally intro- duced as his daughter at $250,000. His next was not related to him, court date is scheduled and that she had left for March. By BRENNA VISSER The Daily Astorian Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde A piece of the sacred meteorite Tomanowos, also known as the Willamette meteorite. It was returned to the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde as a donation by the Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum. size and distinctive shape, it’s become one of the best- known meteorites in the world. But long before Toma- nowos was donated to the American Museum of Natu- ral History, it had achieved cultural importance to the Clackamus people of the Willamette Valley, whose descendants are members of the tribes of the Grand Ronde. The Clackamus knew that Tomanowos came from the sky, and used the water that gathered in its divots and basins for cleans- ing and healing. In 1999, the tribes attempted to regain the meteorite under the Native American Graves Pro- tection and Repatriation Act. In the end, an agree- ment was reached with the American Natural History Museum, which recognizes the cultural signifi cance of the meteorite to the Grand Ronde people, allows them to conduct ceremonies at Tomanowos, and says that if it ever goes off display, it will be returned to the tribes. The Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde make a yearly visit to Tomanowos, where they hold a private ceremony at the museum. “We express our apprecia- tion from the standpoint that they are keeping something which is very sacred to us,” says Kennedy. The museum’s interim executive director indicated in a prepared statement that the meteorite’s sacred nature for the Grand Ronde was an important factor in the deci- sion to return it. “It is a great honor for the Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum to return this cul- turally signifi cant artifact to the Grand Ronde Tribe, so they may share it with generations to come,” John Rasmussen, the interim executive director, said. This is the second piece of the meteorite to be donated to the Grand Ronde, and there are thought to be over a hundred of pieces of the meteorite owned by pri- vate collectors across the country. Kennedy hopes there will be more returned. “I think that when folks hear the story, they will come forward and donate their pieces back,” Ken- nedy says. “Recognizing that as all of the meteorite is returned, it helps make a people whole.” This piece, along with the second, will be on display at the Chachalu Museum and Cultural Center as part of an exhibit called “Witness.” It opens in late spring . EMERALD HEIGHTS APARTMENTS Astoria, OR Small 2 bedroom units! 1/2 OFF First Month’s Rent (with credit approval) 6 month lease CLEAN, COZY & REFURBISHED All Rents Include: Electricity · Garbage · Water Oregon fi sh may be removed from endangered list A rebound for the Borax Lake chub By JES BURNS Oregon Public Broadcasting An Oregon fi sh is being proposed for removal from the federal list of endan- gered species. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service started the delisting process Monday for the Borax Lake chub. The chub is a tiny golden minnow that only lives in one place — southeast Ore- gon’s Borax Lake. The lake is small, hot, alkaline and a rather surprising place to fi nd fi sh. The fi sh are believed to have been isolated there after the lake that covered the current-day Alvord Des- ert began to shrink more than 10,000 years ago. They took refuge around a hot spring that maintains Borax Lake year round. Unlike many spe- cies, the Borax Lake chub wasn’t listed as endangered because its population was in decline. It was extended protections in the early 1980s, when geothermal energy exploration threat- ened to disrupt the spring that provided the fi sh’s only habitat. Since listing, the 10-acre lake and land around it was U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service The tiny Borax Lake chub is being proposed for removal from the endangered species list. purchased and protected by T he Nature Conservancy. “By doing that, it meant that there was no more graz- ing right up to the edge of the lake. It meant that the land in close proximity to the lake was not avail- able for mineral or geother- mal development, and it also restricted access to the lake,” said Fish and Wild- life Service biologist Chris Allen. The federal Bureau of Land Management then added an extra buffer by designating the public land around the lake an area of critical environmental con- cern. Allen said the state of Oregon also secured the water rights for the spring, making irrigation diver- sions a thing of the past. The Fish and Wildlife Service says it has been put- ting an emphasis on reclas- sifying and delisting species when they’ve met recovery goals. Because the Borax Lake chub is only found in one small lake in Harney County, over the course of 40 years, wildlife manag- ers were able address most of the threats to the species. “It is always to easier to work on recovery actions on species with more nar- row distributions. And you can’t get too much more narrow than the Borax Lake chub,” Allen said. “The smaller the range of the spe- cies the more you have the ability to control conserva- tion management of that by land ownership.” But that same limited species range also presents a more dire situation. “This is it. This is the only place on Earth where that fi sh lives, the only hab- itat that’s available,” said Garth Fuller, E astern Ore- gon conservation director with T he Nature Conser- vancy. “It can’t disperse. It can’t move. There isn’t a standby. You don’t have a second chance.” That’s part of the rea- son that Fuller would rather see the minnow downlisted to “threatened” instead of being removed from the endangered species list completely, as is being proposed by the Fish and Wildlife Service. He says there are still some threats remaining to the chub. “I think the largest hur- dle is the remaining poten- tial for geothermal develop- ment on the private lands in the area. 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