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in native language, own library. Hope to have own Navajo culture presented. At meetings use to have them dictate what they wanted. Have own ideas as to confidentiality.

Dongoske - Volunteers to write “white” paper. Laidlaw and Pilles volunteered.

Pilles - Wait until tomorrow.

Dinner at Kachina room at 6 PM

End at 5:10 PM

THURSDAY: NOVEMBER 10, 1994

ORAL TRADITION AND ARCHAEOLOGY

Today cover archaeology and oral traditions. How do they fit, interact. Research designs using oral traditions to solve archaeology problems.

Pilles - If its good enough for Fewkes, its good enough for me!

Kintigh - Can work both ways, what can oral tradition do to help archaeologists, what can the archaeology do to help the Native Americans explain their oral traditions. Make an obligation to listen and help use oral tradition. At times Native Americans may not want to talk to archaeologists.

Breternitz - Not compatible in the past. Oral tradition recorded in the past, not used by archaeologists. How can the two interface. How about funding? at this level?

Kintigh - Archaeologists spoke on migrations. Then fell into disuse. Now its in the forefront. People do move around, and on a large scale. Something to explore, and come up with archaeology and perhaps affirm oral traditions. Inform each others world view.

Downum - Incorporating something into what we do. Gives meaning into archaeology and issues. How combine evidence of oral tradition and archaeology. How does this all relate to significance. It gives meaning. Change with a difficult transition, and a new way to think of archaeology.

Reid - Talking about prehistorians. Ancients used as managers of a resource and systems. Private sector doing more on the prehistoric archaeology. How can people reconstruct a past lifeway, how can they when they have no knowledge of such. Could use oral history or those who keep that history.

Ferguson - Oral history is a subset of religion. Archaeologists often want to abstract that

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