Drought exposes once-submerged Oregon
town to archaeological dig
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[October 10, 2014]
By Courtney Sherwood
PORTLAND Ore. (Reuters) - Record drought
on the U.S. West Coast has exposed the ruins of an Oregon hamlet once
submerged under the waters of a man-made reservoir, allowing a rare
opportunity for an archaeological excavation, a U.S. Bureau of
Reclamation official said on Thursday.
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The tiny community of Klamath Junction was once home to two gas
stations and a cluster of homes and other buildings that date back
to the 1920s, but its residents were relocated and the structures
inundated as part of a 1960 irrigation project that extended a
reservoir known as Emigrant Lake.
"We want to determine if there's historic significance at the site,"
including whether to add the site to the National Register of
Historic Places, said Douglas DeFlitch, an Oregon field office
manager for the bureau. "One man's treasure is another man's trash."
California has been suffering under its worst drought on record
while swaths of Oregon and Washington state to the north were also
seeing abnormally dry conditions, which have brought a busy wildfire
season and prompted efforts to limit water usage.
This year's drought has drained Emigrant Lake, near Ashland in
southern Oregon, of about 90 percent of its water, leaving boat
ramps dry, turning the lake bed into a mucky plain and revealing
building foundations, debris and scattered tools at the site,
DeFlitch said.
Oregon law requires sites more than 50 years old to be assessed for
historical significance and any health hazards, such as oil leaks,
before volunteers can be called in to help clear remains, DeFlitch
said.
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DeFlitch said he expects to have the results of the archaeological
and hazardous materials reviews within the month.
Klamath Junction may have been partially exposed during a previous
drought in 1994, but Bureau of Reclamation officials was not able to
inspect the site at the time, he said.
(Editing by Eric M. Johnson and Eric Walsh)
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