3 research outputs found

    NAGPRA’s Broader Impacts: Assessing the Variety of Procedures followed by Medical Examiner and Coroner Offices for the Analysis and Disposition of Human Skeletal Remains

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    The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, passed in 1990, was enacted in order to provide Native Americans with the legal means to reclaim the remains of their ancestors. Although it has been almost 30 years since the law was passed, it has not been successful in ensuring Native American remains are repatriated in the proper manner. This thesis examines the implementation of NAGPRA within medical examiner and coroner offices, a venue that has yet to be explored in this context.Through the distribution of a nationwide survey, data was collected on medicolegal practitioner’s familiarity with NAGPRA as well as the presence of disposition protocol for non-forensically significant Native American remains. The results indicate that there is a disconnect present between the medicolegal profession and the implementation of NAGPRA. This research will discuss what has led to this disconnect as well as what can be done to bridge it

    Archaeological investigations at the Cruz Bay public cemetery in St. John, US Virgin Islands

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    The Jeffrey L. Brown Institute of Archaeology (JBIA) of the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga (UTC) in partnership with the Forensic Anthropology Center (FAC) of the University of Tennessee Knox-ville (UTK) performed archaeological monitoring and data recovery to remove and relocate burial features near the Cruz Bay Public Cemetery within the Cruz Bay Historic District in Cruz Bay, St. John, US Virgin Islands. The current Area of Potential Effect (APE) for the cemetery excavations targets the portion of the historic Cruz Bay Public Cemetery impacted by the Cruz Bay Underground project, encompassing 132 m (433 ft) of conduit excavations within Strande Gade (Bay Street) and 30 m (98 ft) of conduit excavations within the Gallows Point Resort driveway.https://scholar.utc.edu/archaeology-reports/1089/thumbnail.jp
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