25 THE LOST MANUSCRIPT
You must go out there and see what is happening,” Kathryn
Red Corn told me when I visited the Osage Nation again, in June
- And so  following   her directions, I   drove   through Pawhuska
 and headed west across the prairie, through the tall grasses, until I
 saw what she’d vividly described to me: scores of metallic towers
 invading the sky. Each one stood 420 feet tall, the equivalent of a
 thirty-story skyscraper, and had three whirring blades. A single
 blade was as long as the wings of an airliner. The towers were part
 of a windmill farm, which spanned more than eight thousand
 acres and was expected to eventually supply electricity to some
 forty-five thousand homes in Oklahoma.
More    than    a   hundred years   after   oil was discovered  in  Osage
territory,  a   new revolutionary   source  of  energy  was transforming
the region. But this    time    the Osage   viewed  it  as  a   threat  to  their
underground reservation.    “Did    you see them?”  Red Corn    said    of
the turbines,   when    I   returned.   “This   company came    in  here    and
put them    up  without our permission.”    The federal government,
representing    the Osage   Nation, had filed   a   lawsuit against Enel,
the Italian energy  conglomerate    that    owned   the wind    farm.   Citing
the terms   of  the 1906    Allotment   Act,    the suit    alleged that    because
the company had excavated   limestone   and other   minerals    while
building    the foundations for the turbines,   it  needed  the Osage’s
approval    to  continue    operations. Otherwise,  Enel    was violating   the
Osage’s  sovereignty     over    their   underground     reservation.    The
company insisted    that    it  wasn’t  in  the mining  business,   and thus
