Not reservations as such, but there are tribal boundaries that last to this day. Osage County/Nation isn't the only one. Heck, just drive around Tulsa, and you'll see "Entering the Cherokee/Muscogee (Creek)/Osage Nation" signs bisecting the city into thirds centered roughly at the 244/412/51/LL/64 (and there's probably 546732469 other refs I'm omitting) interchange in downtown. Several smaller nations are in the Kansas/Missouri corner. The Choctaw Nation dominates the Ouachitas. And yeah, the Osage got truly hosed...
On Wed, Feb 13, 2013 at 3:19 PM, Nathan Mills <nat...@nwacg.net> wrote: > On 2/13/2013 6:27 AM, Paul Johnson wrote: > >> >> Considering that there's nearly 40 in the area within relation 161645 >> (Oklahoma), I'd honestly be surprised if there aren't at least 50-something >> just within states starting with "O". >> >> > AFAIK, all of the reservations in Oklahoma were allotted before statehood. > There is, obviously, some land that has been taken into trust by BIA for > the casinos. Osage County is the closest thing we have to a reservation, > but even there only mineral rights are fully native owned. There are tribal > governments here, but no reservations. > > -Nathan > > > ______________________________**_________________ > Talk-us mailing list > Talk-us@openstreetmap.org > http://lists.openstreetmap.**org/listinfo/talk-us<http://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk-us> >
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