Posted on 08/31/2002 12:30:40 AM PDT by sarcasm
After almost 10,000 years buried in the muck of the Columbia River, followed by six years in lab and museum vaults, the skeletal remains of Kennewick Man should be given to scientists looking for clues about how people first migrated to North America, a federal judge in Portland ruled yesterday.
The ruling by U.S. Magistrate John Jelderks is a victory for eight anthropologists who fought the federal government's attempts to turn the remains over to a coalition of five Northwest tribes who want to rebury the "Ancient One."
"We hung in there because we think these ancient remains are very significant and very important to study," said Robson Bonnichsen, a professor of anthropology at Texas A&M University.
"This is an extremely rare individual," he said. "In all of the United States, there's only about eight skeletons of this age known."
In a 73-page decision, Jelderks roundly criticized the decision by former Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt to give the remains to Indian tribes for reburial.
The federal government, Jelderks wrote, "failed to consider all the relevant factors, had acted before it had all of the evidence, had failed to fully consider legal questions, had assumed facts that proved to be erroneous, had failed to articulate a satisfactory explanation for its action, had followed a 'flawed' procedure and had prematurely decided the issue."
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Alan Schneider, a lawyer representing the scientists, said the ruling "is going to encourage federal agencies to be more deliberate and fair when they make decisions concerning the study of ancient skeletal remains."
The scientists' lawsuit was against the federal agencies and their interpretation of the Native American Grave Protection and Repatriation Act of 1990, not against the tribes or their cultural beliefs, they said.
In a statement issued last night, the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation anticipated an appeal: "We are confident that upon appeal, the court will recognize that (the Repatriation Act) protects the remains of Native American people from being treated solely as objects of scientific curiosity.
"... This treatment of Native American remains as scientific specimens deprives Native people of the basic right to properly bury or care for these ancestors. By enacting (the Repatriation Act), Congress intended that Native American ancestral human remains be treated the same as non-Indian remains, with respect."
Two college students on their way to a hydroplane race in Kennewick stumbled across the remains in July 1996. They notified local police, who investigated and then notified the Army Corps of Engineers, which controls the land around the discovery site.
Within six weeks, the corps decided to give the remains to local tribes under the Repatriation Act, which states that tribes have ownership of ancient artifacts and remains that are culturally or biologically linked to a tribe through historical, geographical, biological or other evidence.
Bonnichsen and the other scientists sued to halt transfer of the bones. They said there was no way to know if Kennewick Man was culturally or biologically related to modern Northwest tribes without further study.
"If you think about it, something that's 9,400 years old, that could be the ancestor of half of North America, maybe even people in South America and Canada," Bonnichsen said.
Some scientists think Kennewick Man resembles the people of northern Japan, prompting speculation that the remains may be evidence of migration from different parts of Asia to North America.
In 2000, the U.S. Department of Interior reaffirmed the corps' decision and said the bones should go to the tribes because the tribes had an "oral tradition" of history in the area around the discovery site.
But "trying to use oral history to say what happened 8,000 years ago is a stretch," Bonnichsen said.
The government agencies could appeal yesterday's ruling; their lawyers could not be reached for comment late yesterday.
Since September 1998, the remains have been stored under heavy security in the basement of the Burke Museum at the University of Washington. At least one door leading to the storage room requires two keys to open.
"I've never had to be searched so many times to do my work,'' said Gary Huckleberry, a geologist at Washington State University who has studied the remains.
"It's a unique specimen. It's a rare treasure that contributes to our understanding of the past, and I think it belongs to us all."
Yes, so it does. I can't wait to learn MORE abot Kennewick Man ! This should finnally put to rest, some of the PC garbage about the nasty, evil white man. LOL
Absolutely. The argument above that giving the remains back to the Indians is an 'establishment of religion' makes a lot of sense to me. Worse, giving the remains back undermines the very concept of science. If scientists can be embargoed from engaging in science on the basis of political correctness, we're in a lot more trouble than we think!
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