Tennessee and Kentucky Return Native Remains to Tribal Communities
Published Date: 3/18/2026
Notice
Summary
The Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation and Western Kentucky University have finished checking and listing Native American human remains and artifacts found in Kentucky. They’ve confirmed these items belong to specific Native tribes and are ready to return them starting April 17, 2026. This means important cultural treasures will soon go back to their rightful communities, honoring their history and heritage.
Analyzed Economic Effects
4 provisions identified: 3 benefits, 1 costs, 0 mixed.
Large Number of Items Currently Unlocated
The inventory notes that only 11 of the belongings known to have been removed during the 1969/1970 excavations were located, leaving 638 belongings and one Ancestor currently unaccounted for; steps are being taken to identify their location.
Repatriation Available April 17, 2026
The Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation and Western Kentucky University completed an inventory and found human remains representing at least three individuals and 649 associated funerary objects. Those remains and objects may be returned to affiliated tribes beginning on or after April 17, 2026.
Specific Tribes Identified as Affiliated
The notice states there is a cultural affiliation between the remains/objects and these groups: Absentee-Shawnee Tribe of Indians of Oklahoma; Cherokee Nation; Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians; Eastern Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma; Quapaw Nation; Shawnee Tribe; and the United Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians in Oklahoma. Those named tribes are connected to the remains and objects in this notice.
Who May Request Repatriation
Repatriation requests may be submitted by any one or more of the tribes or Native organizations named in the notice, by any lineal descendant, or by another Tribe or Native organization that shows by a preponderance of the evidence that it is culturally affiliated. If competing requests are received, TDEC-DOA and WKU must determine the most appropriate requestor; joint requests are treated as a single request.
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Key Dates
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