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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -The Alabama Museum
of Natural History at The University of Alabama will host a
free reception and talk on the unsolved artifact heist of nearly
270 Native American vessels, Tuesday, April 22, at 5 p.m. in room
205 Smith Hall, located on 6th Avenue of the UA campus.
Dr. Vernon James Knight, professor and chairperson of UA’s
department of anthropology,
will reveal details on the unsolved 1980 theft of more than 70 percent
of the Museum’s exhibit-quality specimens in the collection
of Indian artifacts housed at the collections repository at Moundville.
Excavated from Moundville in the 1930s, the stolen vessels, appraised
23 years ago at $1 million, are irreplaceable, according to Knight.
“A great many people are unaware of the magnitude of this
theft and the gaping hole it has left in the prehistoric heritage
of Alabama and the Southeast,” said Knight, also the Museum’s
curator of southeastern archaeology. “This was the largest
antiquities theft in the history of the South.”
No new leads have been produced since the FBI first investigated
the case in the early ‘80s. Now, for the first time, a web
site containing photographs of the missing artifacts is available
at http://museums.ua.edu/oas/stolenartifacts/.
“Using Internet technology, we’re now able to inexpensively
publish photographs of all 264 stolen objects, and distribute this
information to many audiences at local, state, national, and international
levels” Knight said. “This will greatly enhance the
possibility that the stolen objects may be seen and reported.”
Knight said there is a growing trend of online auctions of older
Native American artifact collections, both legal and illegitimate.
“In 23 years, not a single vessel of those stolen has turned
up,” said Knight. “This leads to the hope that the stolen
items were not dispersed and may still be together in a group, maybe
even still in the area.”
The talk, followed by a reception, is free and open to the public.
For more information, phone 205/348-7550 or e-mail natural.history@ua.edu.
Operating hours for UA’s Alabama Museum of Natural History
are 10 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday, and 1-4:30 p.m. Sunday.
UA’s Jones Archaeological Museum in Moundville, 13 miles south
of Tuscaloosa, is open 9 a.m.-5 p.m. daily. Admission is charged.
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