KODIAK, AK — An Alaska museum has received dozens of ancestral human remains to hold until they can be returned to their native tribe, officials said.
Alutiiq Museum has taken delivery of 38 ancestral human remains discovered near two bays southeast of Kodiak Island, The Kodiak Daily Mirror reported Thursday.
University of Wisconsin-Madison archeologists unearthed the remains in the 1960s before the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers discovered the collection, officials said. The Corps was then tasked by a regional historic preservation officer to locate Alaska archaeological collections.
Twenty-three human remains were discovered at Three Saints Bay and 15 human remains were discovered at the mouth of Kiavak Bay, the Federal Register said. In addition, more than 50 funerary objects were found in both locations including blades, figurines, mammal bones, metal fragments and stones.
As part of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act enacted in 1990, museums and federal agencies were mandated to “return certain Native American cultural items _ human remains, funerary objects, sacred objects, or objects of cultural patrimony _ to lineal descendants, and culturally affiliated Indian tribes and Native Hawaiian organizations,” according to the National Park Service website.
Repatriation is a complicated process, the museum said. After the cultural items are recovered, they are inventoried and stored until the process can be completed which includes notifying tribes, verifying the tribes’ claims for ownership and publishing the recovered items notice in the Federal Register.
The Alutiiq Tribe of Old Harbor and Old Harbor Native Corporation said they are glad to have the items returned, but sad that the burial sites were destroyed.
“It is only right that our ancestors are being returned so that we can respectfully lay them back to rest in their homeland,” said Cynthia Berns, Old Harbor Native Corporation’s vice-president of community and external affairs.
The Alutiiq Tribe of Old Harbor is expected to hold a burial ceremony for the remains on Sept. 20 at Three Saints Bay, Berns said.
“I am very happy we are bringing our ancestors home,” said Phyllis Clough, one of the tribe’s council members.