Search Results for keywords:"Cultural Patrimony"

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Search Results: keywords:"Cultural Patrimony"

  • Type:Notice
    Citation:90 FR 16541
    Reading Time:about 11 minutes

    The University of California, Riverside plans to return 69 cultural items to Native American tribes under the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA). These items, which include ceramic sherds and animal bones, are culturally important to several Cahuilla tribes in California. The repatriation might take place after May 19, 2025. If there are multiple requests for the same items, UC Riverside will decide the rightful recipient, and they will also inform the relevant tribes and organizations about the notice.

    Simple Explanation

    The University of California, Riverside is planning to give back 69 special items, like pieces of pottery and bones, to Native American tribes because these items are important to them, and they follow a rule called NAGPRA. They'll decide who gets which items after May 19, 2025, and let everyone involved know.

  • Type:Notice
    Citation:90 FR 12757
    Reading Time:about 3 minutes

    The Denver Art Museum plans to return a cultural item known as the Raven Screen to the Tlingit & Haida Indian Tribe. This action is in line with the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), which aims to ensure cultural objects are in the rightful hands of their original communities. The Raven Screen, made up of two wooden sections with raven motifs, holds significant cultural value for the Tlingit community in Alaska. The repatriation process may begin after April 18, 2025, and other tribes or parties who believe they have a claim can submit requests for repatriation.

    Simple Explanation

    The Denver Art Museum is giving back a special object with raven pictures to the Tlingit & Haida Indian Tribe because it belongs to them, and if anyone else thinks it belongs to them, they can say so by April 18, 2025.