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    Research:
   
    Badger-Two Medicine Traditional Cultural District, Montana - Boundary Expansion Project
Cultural Resource Studies

2004-2005
Badger-Two Medicine, also known as the "Blackfeet Unit" of Lewis and Clark National Forest, Montana is a large watershed formed by the tributaries of Badger Creek, Birch Creek, and the Two Medicine River which run through the aboriginal territory of the Blackfeet Tribe of Montana and join the Marias River. This pristine, resource-rich area has been threatened by oil and gas exploration along the Rocky Mountain Front since the 1960s. One of the many efforts made to avert impacts from this industry was to create the Badger-Two Medicine Traditional Cultural District, which is eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic Places. This property excludes the northernmost portion of the Lewis and Clark N. F, where a previously banned gas lease became active in 2000. The USFS sponsored Section 106 research aimed at identifying and documenting places and resources of traditional cultural significance for the Blackfeet people that could be potentially damaged by gas extraction. Zedeno, in partnership with the Blackfeet Community College and the Tribal Historic Preservation Office, conducted ethnographic field surveys and archival research to document traditional, historical, and contemporary cultural attachments to, and uses of, the excluded area. The research results led Zedeno to recommend that the boundaries of the current Traditional Cultural District be expanded to encompass this area. The USFS will use research results to determine whether new Environmental Impact Assessments of the gas lease are warranted, and to develop management strategies for culturally significant places and resources

BARA Researchers:

M. N. Zedeno


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