Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Tribes, groups pursue national monument

Lands bill includes new protected area

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RENO — Local tribes and national conservati­on groups are lobbying to establish a fourth national monument in Southern Nevada that would preserve Indigenous cultural sites and critical environmen­tal habitat.

The proposed Avi Kwa Ame National Monument would protect nearly 600 square miles east of the Mojave Desert in southern Clark County.

The Wilderness Society, the National Parks Conservati­on Associatio­n and local tribes are working together to achieve the land designatio­n, according to the Reno Gazette Journal.

“I call this the crossroads of the America West. Almost everything that happened in westward expansion happened in this landscape,” said Alan O’Neill, an adviser to the National Parks Conservati­on Associatio­n and former superinten­dent of the Lake Mead National Recreation Area.

Avi Kwa Ame is Mojave for “Spirit Mountain.” The mountain and surroundin­g area are sacred to multiple Native American tribes, including Yuman-speaking tribes, Hopi and Chemehuevi Paiute.

Spirit Mountain is the Yuman tribes’ spiritual birthplace and figures prominentl­y within their ideology. The Hopi and Chemehuevi also consider the mountain a sacred site.

“This is a place where our god lives,” said Linda Otero, director of the Aha Makav Cultural Society and former council member Fort Mojave tribe. “It touches our lives in every which way.”

In 1999, Spirit Mountain and 75 square miles surroundin­g the

mountain were listed on the National Register of Historic Places as a Traditiona­l Cultural Property. But the designatio­n included only the mountain, not surroundin­g landscapes.

Since then, two wind projects have threatened the area, and sprawl from Las Vegas continues to creep toward the mountain.

Both wind projects were tabled. But “rather than wait for the next bad project, we decided to be more proactive,” O’Neill said.

Democratic Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto and other state politician­s plan to include the property as part of the Southern Nevada Economic Developmen­t and Conservati­on Act lands bill. The draft version of the bill expands Clark County’s developmen­t boundaries by more than 65 square miles but balances it by creating 480 square miles of new wilderness area.

The designatio­n would connect the Mojave National Preserve, Castle Mountains and Mojave Trails national monuments, Dead Mountains Wilderness Area, Lake Mead National Recreation Area and the Colorado Plateau. Managed by the Bureau of Land Management and Bureau of Reclamatio­n, it includes the South McCullough Wilderness Area and the Wee Thump Joshua Tree Wilderness Area.

The land includes natural springs and petroglyph­s and critical habitat for desert tortoise and golden and bald eagles. It serves as a migratory corridor for desert bighorn sheep.

The property is also home to the oldest and largest Joshua trees in the world, some more than 900 years old.

It also houses the historic Mojave Trail, a 138-mile stretch located in the southernmo­st part of the area used by Mojave and other Native peoples to transport goods with the Chumash and other coastal tribes, and Fort Piute, a former military outpost along the road.

 ?? Las Vegas Review-Journal file ?? A Joshua tree frames Spirit Mountain. The mountain and surroundin­g area are sacred to many Native American tribes. Two wind projects for the area were tabled.
Las Vegas Review-Journal file A Joshua tree frames Spirit Mountain. The mountain and surroundin­g area are sacred to many Native American tribes. Two wind projects for the area were tabled.

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