Laserfiche WebLink
<br />PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE <br />' 1983-1993Administrative <br />President of Burney do Associates and Western Archaeological Consultants, <br />' Inc., Boulder, Colorado; consultants in archaeology, paleontology and history. <br />In May of 1983, I sold my half interest in Western Cultural Resource <br />Management, Inc. (Boulder) to manage my new firm, Burney and Associates. <br />Duties consist of managing the firm's everyday affairs in marketing, preparing <br />proposals, conducting fieldwork (surveying, monitoring, testing, and mitigative <br />excavation) and preparing technical reports. <br />' Archaeology <br />t Conducted fieldwork and prepared reports, research designs, and reviews on <br />various archaeological and historical projects performed in Arizona, <br />California, Colorado, New Mexicro, Oklahoma, Oregon, Tashington, and <br />Wyoming. Co-field Director responsible for the Boulder County <br />' Archaeological Survey for the Lyons Chapter of the Colorado Archaeological <br />Society, P.O. Box 663, Niwot, Colorado 80544. During 1989 and 1990 I was <br />Project Director for 133 mile pipeline project in north-central Oregon <br />t between Madras and Stanfield. My duties included overall field direction of <br />the survey and write-up of all field data in major report undertaking. <br />Since May of 1987, I have been acting Tribal Archaeologist for the <br />' Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, Pendleton, Oregon <br />(Umatilla, Cayuse, and Walla Walla Tribes). During this period I have been <br />responsible for the training of CTUIR tribal Archaeological Technicians in the <br />basics of archaeological research methods, primarily in archival research <br />undertaken at the Washington end Oregon State Historic Preservation Offices <br />(Olympia, Washington and Salem, Oregon respectively). I have also been <br />responsible to the CTUIR for consultation (archaeology portion only) in the <br />area of sacred and religious sites such as burials, cemeteries, vision questing <br />sites, religious ceremony sites, etc.). As part of my work with the CTiIIR I <br />have studied in detail the prehistory of the Department of Energy's Hanford <br />' Reservation located in south-central Washington state, including the Hanford <br />Reach of the Columbia River (Priest Rapids to the north to McNary Dam to <br />the south). Archaeological research has also been undertaken on the Columbia <br />' River as far west as Bonneville Dam (just a short distance east of Portland), <br />the Confederated Tribes of the IImatilla Indian Reservation (east of <br />Pendleton, Oregon), and the area from Pendleton to Huntington, Oregon (a <br />' small town in Oregon near the Idaho border southeast of Pendleton). <br />Numerous meetings have been attended with the Council of Energy Resource <br />Tribes, Denver, the CTUIR, Mission, Oregon, Department of Energy, Richland <br />Area Office, Washington, U.S. Forest Service, IImatilla (Pendlton), ^Aalheur <br />' (John Day), Wallowa-lNhitman (Baker), and Gifford Pinchot (Vancouver, <br />Washington) National Forests, the Bureau of Indian Affiars, Portland Area <br />Office, and the Bureau of Land Management, Burns District. <br /> <br /> <br />