Florida Museum Preps Native Human Remains for Tribal Repatriation Process
Published Date: 8/14/2025
Notice
Summary
The University of Florida’s Museum has finished checking its collection of Native American human remains and related items. They found a clear connection between these remains and certain Native American tribes or Native Hawaiian groups. This means the museum is ready to return these items to the right communities, following important laws that protect Native heritage.
Analyzed Economic Effects
1 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 0 costs, 0 mixed.
Return of Native American Remains
The University of Florida’s Florida Museum of Natural History completed an inventory under the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) and determined there is a cultural affiliation between certain human remains and associated funerary objects and specific Indian Tribes or Native Hawaiian organizations. The museum is prepared to return those remains and items to the affiliated communities.
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Previous: 2025-15409 — Notice of Inventory Completion: University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI
The University of Michigan finished checking its collection of ancestral remains and funerary items and found they belong to certain Native American tribes and Native Hawaiian groups. This means these items can now be returned to the right communities. If you’re part of these groups, keep an eye out for how and when the return will happen—no money changes hands, just respect and care.
Next: 2025-15411 — Notice of Inventory Completion: David A. Fredrickson Archaeological Collections Facility at Sonoma State University, Rohnert Park, CA
Sonoma State University finished checking their collection of Native American items and found they belong to certain tribes. This means these tribes might get their cultural objects returned soon. No money changes hands, but the tribes should watch for next steps to claim their heritage.