Summary of
the Laws
Native American
Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA)
SEC.
7. REPATRIATION.
(a) REPATRIATION OF NATIVE AMERICAN HUMAN REMAINS AND OBJECTS POSSESSED OR
CONTROLLED BY FEDERAL AGENCIES AND MUSEUMS.
(4) Where cultural affiliation of Native American
human remains and funerary objects has not been established in an inventory
prepared pursuant to section 5, or the summary pursuant to section 6, or where
Native American human remains and funerary objects are not included upon any
such inventory, then, upon request and pursuant to subsections (b) and (e) and,
in the case of unassociated funerary objects, subsection (c), such Native
American human remains and funerary objects shall be expeditiously returned
where the requesting Indian tribe or Native Hawaiian organization can show
cultural affiliation by a preponderance of the
evidence based upon geographical, kinship, biological, archaeological,
anthropological, linguistic, folkloric, oral traditional, historical, or other
relevant information or expert opinion.
Summary:
If
the person claiming the rights to the bones can prove cultural affiliation
based upon those factors listed in red above, then they have a right to the
bones. This decision must be made in a
court of law. As a judge, you would
hear the facts presented from all sides and would decide who has, according to
the NAGPRA Law, the Archaeological
Resources Protection Act of 1979
Archaeological
Resources Protection Act of 1979
AN ACT To protect
archaeological resources on public lands and Indian lands, and for other
purposes.
CUSTODY OF RESOURCES
Sec. 5. The
Secretary of the Interior may promulgate regulations providing for-
(1) the exchange,
where appropriate, between suitable universities, museums, or other scientific
or educational institutions, of archaeological resources removed from public
lands and Indian lands pursuant to this Act, and
(2) the ultimate
disposition of such resources and other resources removed pursuant to the Act
of June 27, 1960 (16 U.S.C. 469-469c) or the Act of June 8, 1906 (16 U.S.C. 431-433).
Any exchange or ultimate disposition under such regulation of archaeological
resources excavated or removed from Indian lands shall be subject to the
consent of the Indian or Indian tribe, which owns or has jurisdiction over such
lands. Following promulgation of regulations, under this section,
notwithstanding any other provision of law, such regulations shall govern the
disposition of archaeological resources removed from public lands and Indian
lands pursuant to this Act.
Summary:
Archaeologists must have the
right to hunt for artifacts. When they
find something, if ownership is not clear, then other parties can claim the
rights to the objects. If there are claims
on an object, a judge must make the final decision.