Search Results for keywords:"United Auburn Indian Community"

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Search Results: keywords:"United Auburn Indian Community"

  • Type:Notice
    Citation:90 FR 15476
    Reading Time:about 2 minutes

    The Arizona State Museum, under the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), plans to return certain objects of cultural patrimony to affiliated Indian Tribes or Native Hawaiian organizations. The items include a lot of modified bone, originally obtained by the Gila Pueblo Foundation in 1934, and now linked to the United Auburn Indian Community of the Auburn Rancheria of California. The repatriation can happen after May 12, 2025, and other tribes can request the items if they show they have cultural ties. If there are conflicting requests, the museum will decide the most appropriate recipient.

    Simple Explanation

    The Arizona State Museum is planning to give back some special old items to a group of Native Americans from California because they belong to the tribe and are important to them. Other tribes who think the items belong to them too can ask for them by a certain date, and then the museum will decide who should get them.

  • Type:Notice
    Citation:90 FR 12786
    Reading Time:about 2 minutes

    The San Bernardino County Museum plans to return cultural items to Native American tribes in line with the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA). The items, which include necklaces, beads, buttons, and bones, were initially taken from Auburn, California, and later donated to the museum. The museum has identified a connection between these items and the United Auburn Indian Community of the Auburn Rancheria of California. The repatriation may begin on or after April 18, 2025, and the museum is responsible for resolving any competing requests for these items.

    Simple Explanation

    The San Bernardino County Museum wants to give back special items, like necklaces and beads, to the Native American tribes they belong to. They found out which tribe these things belong to and plan to start giving them back after April 18, 2025.

  • Type:Notice
    Citation:90 FR 12770
    Reading Time:about 2 minutes

    In accordance with the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), the California State University, Sacramento plans to return four cultural items to Native American tribes. These items, collected in the 1960s and 1970s from Yuba County, California, are flaked stone, ground stone, modified stone, and ochre, which hold significant cultural importance. The university has determined that the items should be repatriated to the United Auburn Indian Community of the Auburn Rancheria of California. The repatriation may happen on or after April 18, 2025, but if other tribes also request the items, the university will decide which group is most appropriate to receive them.

    Simple Explanation

    California State University, Sacramento is giving back some special rocks to the Native American tribes because they are important to their culture, and this will happen soon, but there's still some confusion on how things will work if other tribes also want them.