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Journal ArticleDOI

The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act: A New Beginning, Not the End, for Osteological Analysis--A Hopi Perspective

Kurt E. Dongoske
- 21 Jan 1996 - 
- Vol. 20, Iss: 2, pp 287
TLDR
The Hopi Tribe has been involved in consultations concerning the human remains identified in four large developmental projects within the Southwest, including the Transwestern Pipeline, El Paso Gas Pipeline, the Roosevelt Dam Platform Mound Study, and the proposed Fence Lake Coal Mine and Transportation Corridor as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
Before and after passage of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act by the United States Congress in November of 1990, many archaeologists' and physical anthropologists2 lamented that the act and its mandate to consult with Native Americans about the treatment and disposition of human remains recovered from archaeological sites would have dramatically negative effects on the science of archaeology and on paleodemographic, paleopathological, and paleogenetic research. Since NAGPRA was passed, the Hopi Tribe has been involved in consultations concerning the human remains identified in four large developmental projects within the Southwest. These projects include the Transwestern Pipeline, El Paso Gas Pipeline, the Roosevelt Dam Platform Mound Study, and the proposed Fence Lake Coal Mine and Transportation Corridor. To date, more than 1,000 burials have been recovered or disturbed by these projects and the possibility of doubling that number in the near future is very real. The tribe's involvement has caused the Hopi people to evaluate the benefits that analysis of prehistoric human remains can offer them. This has generated perspicacious dialogue between the Hopi Tribe and members of the archaeological and physical anthropological communities. This dialogue results in a research agenda beneficial for all parties. With NAGPRA's passage the furiously debated scientific and ethical issue of repatriation and reburial became a legal mandate. Consequently, physical anthropologists and archaeologists, both in academic settings and in federal agencies, are compelled to work in an environment that is far from the ways they conducted research before NAGPRA. Some archaeologists and physical anthropologists find the changes implemented by NAGPRA hard to swallow. They assert that the treatment of human remains and associated funerary objects recovered from an archaeological context should revert to the conventional method ofcuration without consultation. Some of these arguments are based on the perceived necessity to maintain permanent collections for future study in the advent that new techniques of analyses are developed., Others acrimoniously assert that this

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Journal ArticleDOI

Collaborative Archaeologies and Descendant Communities

TL;DR: In the 1970s, public archaeology, a major theme in anthropology, sought to articulate the field's new orientation toward engaging the nonprofessional, general public, particularly in the realm of cultural resource management (CRM).
Journal ArticleDOI

Successful enrichment and recovery of whole mitochondrial genomes from ancient human dental calculus

TL;DR: Dental calculus is a viable alternative source of human DNA that can be used to reconstruct full mitogenomes from archaeological remains and its potential for full mitochondrial genome reconstruction in maternal lineage ancestry analysis is investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Federal repatriation legislation and the role of physical anthropology in repatriation.

TL;DR: Repatriation experiences at the NMNH demonstrate the changing relationships between museums and Native peoples, the continuing important contributions that physical anthropology makes to the repatriation process, and the importance of physical anthropology in understanding the recent and ancient history of North America.
Dissertation

The (Un)Settling of America: Science and the Search for the First Americans

TL;DR: In this article, a case study of the practice of science in its search for the First Americans in this unstable environment is presented, focusing on the conflicts between the methods of science and the traditional beliefs of modern American Indians.
Journal ArticleDOI

Engaging bodies in the public imagination: bioarchaeology as social science, science, and humanities.

TL;DR: The public face of bioarchaeology is explored and the trends in publication practices that reflect diversifying research strategies are considered, to provide a uniquely comparative perspective on human life that transcends traditional boundaries of the natural sciences, social sciences, and humanities.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The First Claim for Cannibalism in the Southwest: Walter Hough's 1901 Discovery at Canyon Butte Ruin 3, Northeastern Arizona

TL;DR: This paper found evidence of perimortem bone damage such as cutting, anvil or hammerstone abrasions, smashing, burning, many missing vertebrae, and good bone preservation.