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geoff carver <[log in to unmask]>
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HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sun, 1 Oct 2000 22:00:41 +0200
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i didn't see any comment to this when the URL was posted, so i decided to spread
it around - see also
        http://www.seminoletribe.com/tribune/deadhead/tragedy.shtml

Tragedy At Pith-la-choc-co
By Peter B. Gallagher and Charles Flowers
When the waters of drought-stricken Newnan’s Lake receded early this summer, the
naked lake bottom revealed an eerie surprise. Ancient canoes poking from the
lake bed where they had lain for hundreds, perhaps thousands, of years. In fact,
87 canoes were flagged by archaeologists there -- roughly one-fourth of all
ancient canoes ever found to date in North America.

The archeological find of a lifetime! That is the way Melissa Memory, a state
archaeologist, described it. Word of the find skyrocketed across the
archaeological world. The most canoes ever found in one place, prior to this,
was 12.

Why were so many canoes left here? It was a mystery Ms. Memory was eagerly
pondering when she heard a bulldozer crashing though the delicate cypress forest
along the edge of the lake and, with deep tread trenches, heading toward the
area where the canoes lay, a graveyard of half-sunken sterns and bows. Some
canoes were more than 30 feet in length.

She placed an emergency call to the state Department of Environmental Protection
(DEP), the lead agency watchdogging this lake. So did Florida Wildlife
Federation President Manley Fuller, whose phone began ringing with complainers.
So did retired biologist Dale Crider, who has lived on the lake for 30 years.
The DEP didn’t seem very concerned, they report.

"No big deal," said Gordon Roberts, the DEP investigative chief. "Nothing to
worry about."

They dialed 911. An Alachua County Sheriff’s deputy showed up and approached the
man in charge of the bulldozer, one L.C. "Chuck" Pinson from Santa Rosa Beach.
He revealed a permit, signed by the DEP, which allowed him to go anywhere he
wanted, for an entire year, to harvest deadhead logs. He chose Newnan’s Lake, a
kidney-shaped, 7,000-acre lake near Gainesville the Seminoles called
Pith-la-choc-co.

Deadhead logging - removing submerged cut heart pine and old growth cypress left
over from shoreline sawmill operations decades ago - had been banned in Florida
for more than 25 years. But a quirky series of events, which began when Gov
Lawton Chiles urged his Cabinet to repeal the ban  (in his final Cabinet session
one week before he died) and continued this past April with environmentalists
and elected officials ushering the destructive industry back to the state.

Strong environmental control words were placed in the new regulations. Words
like monitoring, pre-assessment, training, etc. But when Pinson paid his $6,000
license fee and cranked up his ‘dozer, the system broke down.

An investigation by the Seminole Tribune has revealed:

*Pinson was given a permit designed for deadhead logging in rivers, not lakes.
The state has no permit designed for the special ecology and circumstances of
lakes.

*The DEP sent no notice to the public; the public had no opportunity to comment
or object. "It’s required by law," says Fuller. "Someone should be skewered over
this."

*The DEP did not even notify the Division of Historical Resources (DHR). A
pre-assessment of the site’s archeological value -- required by law -- was never
completed. Thousands of years of continuous human habitation on the shore of
that lake had already been documented in reports written by some of the world’s
top scientists. A distinctive arrowhead shape, found in abundance here, was
given the name "Newnan’s Point" in the international lexicon of antiquities. "We
knew significant sites would appear when the water went down," says Memory. "It
is only logical. But 87 canoes? No, we could not have predicted that."

*Despite a rich wildlife presence -- including two designated wildlife preserves
along the lake shore, the state Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC)
was not notified, and given no input into any environmental assessment. The St.
John’s River Water Management District was not notified either; their 372-acre
Gum Root Swamp Conservation area is close by.

*Pinson cut two roads through the fragile lake wetlands to get his equipment in,
and the logs out of, the lake. He passed within the restricted area around an
eagles’ nest and several osprey nests. He pulled logs out of a rookery for
wading birds. And thousands of wading birds have abandoned the historic nesting
site.

*His earth-moving equipment blocked off Hatchet Creek’s flow into the lake. The
creek is now a stagnant ditch. State monies will be required to fix the problem
if the lake does not rise to cover the road he dug.

*A FWC law enforcement officer charged to enforce laws in the area took his
vacation and went to work for Pinson. The matter -- conflict of interest -- is
now under an internal investigation. Kids in three-wheelers were given tickets
by FWC officers, while Pinson’s bulldozer and airboat roared down the lake.

*The state archaeologist who was monitoring the logger, desperately trying to
protect the 87 sites strewn about the northeast sector of the lake, irritated
Pinson. To accommodate Pinson, Melissa Memory’s boss at the state’s Bureau of
Archeological Research ordered her to stay away, fearing a confrontation. After
publicly complaining, Crider was sent a letter from DEP warning HIM not to
remove anything from the lake bottom.

*When work was stopped briefly, the DHR sent the logger a letter okaying his
plans to resume. Most of the damage to the canoes was done after that. "We
trusted that he wouldn’t go into the restricted areas," says Jim Miller of DHR.
"In hindsight, I guess we made a mistake."

*Eyewitnesses have reported the following actions to authorities: Seven canoe
sites were destroyed by the logger. Artifacts were illegally removed by the
logger. He barreled through a 30-foot canoe site after promising he would leave
it alone the day before. (Pinson kept his permit on him, calling it "God in my
back pocket.") His crew topped natural "dead fall" trees into deadhead logs and
removed them. Allegations all. Some witnesses have videotapes and photographs.

No charges have been filed. The DEP is considering another Pinson permit to get
100 logs from another part of Pith-la-choc-co. The system is still confused:
DEP’s Roberts told the Tribune Pinson only wants 44 more logs. Pinson is
understandlably miffed at environmentalists and the press, especially this
newspaper: "I walked around feeling like I had arrows stuck in my rib cage. I
was accused of several things that just didn’t happen."

As the Seminole Tribune reported in our last issue, the Seminole Tribe of
Florida was never notified of the find by DHR. The Tribe was given no
opportunity to comment or object, or to even lend a hand. On a personal visit to
the site last week, Chairman Billie gave Melissa Memory an answer to the mystery
of the 87 canoes: "This was a place where long boats were made."

Pith-la-choc-co. Place of long boats.

But there are more disturbing questions. Dale Crider asks: "How did such a thing
happen in the name of the state?" A good place to start. The answer may shock
you. The Seminole Tribune will publish a full account of this controversy on its
web site www.seminoletribe.com/tribune/deadhead in the next few days and again
in a special section on Pith-la-choc-co in our next print issue.

-- Peter B. Gallagher directs Special Projects for Seminole Communications.
Charles Flowers is a freelance writer who specializes in environmental issues.



geoff carver
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