Court releases ancient skeleton. (Anthropology).Kennewick Man Kennewick Man is the name for the remains of a prehistoric man found on a bank of the Columbia River near Kennewick, Washington, USA on July 28, 1996. The discovery of Kennewick Man was accidental: a pair of spectators found his skull while attending the annual hydroplane races. , the roughly 9,000-year-old human skeleton discovered in Washington State in 1996, has had his day in court and now appears headed for the laboratory. On Aug. 30, a federal judge overturned a Department of Interior decision to give the ancient remains to a coalition of Native American tribes for reburial Noun 1. reburial - the act of burying again reburying burying, burial - concealing something under the ground . The group of eight researchers that originally filed the lawsuit now has 45 days to submit to the judge a plan for studying the specimen. Interior Department officials have yet to announce whether they will appeal the decision. The judge's ruling centers on the 1990 Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) is a United States federal law passed in 1990 requiring federal agencies and institutions that receive federal funding[1] to return Native American cultural items to their respective peoples. . No evidence shows either a "cultural affiliation" or a "shared group identity" of Kennewick Man with any modern Native American group, as required under that law, to justify the return of bones and other finds to the tribes, the judge concluded. Kennewick Man's bones are thus fair game for scientific study. The Society for American Archaeology The Society for American Archaeology (SAA) is the largest organization of professional archaeologists of the Americas in the world. The Society was founded in 1934 and today has over 7000 members. in Washington, D.C., says that the new ruling still allows Native American tribes to reclaim the remains of their direct ancestors while granting scientists the right to study bones and artifacts artifacts see specimen artifacts. from the distant past.--B.B. |
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