The Hennepin County Board is expected next week to approve $700,000 to repair and restore ancient American Indian burial mounds found near Lake Minnetonka.
In 2015, bulldozers unearthed burial mounds as reconstruction began on Bushaway Road, part of County Road 101. Experts had surveyed the land and thought the burial mounds were located 30 to 50 feet east of the construction site.
Work was halted immediately and plans redrawn at the Breezy Point intersection to nix a roundabout and realign the road, as Hamline University archaeologists worked with the Minnesota Indian Affairs Council to restore the mounds.
Since that initial contract for $345,000 in 2015, county officials say there's still more work for archaeologists, forensic specialists and trained field staffers to recover bone fragments and return them to their initial resting places at Breezy Point Road and County Road 101 in Minnetonka.
A plaque will be placed at the site to memorialize the Indians' remains.
It's not clear how old the remains are, but Minnesota has an estimated 12,000 known mounds that date from about 500 B.C. to 1500 A.D., according to the state archaeology office. Along Lake Minnetonka, 524 burial mounds were mapped in the 1880s.
Road closures ended last fall on the Bushaway Road construction project, which included repaving and widening the century-old road from Minnetonka to Wayzata.
The project added turn lanes, new sewers and a bike and pedestrian trail, and replaced what was supposed to be a temporary bridge over the railroad tracks. Landscaping along the road was done on Earth Day.