Detail View: Image Archives: Reburial Ceremony in Crestone, Colorado

File Name: 
ANT2015-3-5.jpg
catalog number: 
ANT2015-3-5
collection: 
Fieldwork, Curator
title: 
Reburial Ceremony in Crestone, Colorado
creator: 
Richard M. Wicker
creator type: 
photographer
creator: 
René O'Connell
creator type: 
creator of digital collection
description: 
An unusual Ceremony honors the dead. A collection of human remains was buried in Crestone, Colorado, during a nondenominational ceremony carefully planned and overseen by the Department of Anthropology. A daylong conference was held with religious, secular, and scientific leaders to determine what to do with the remains. Ultimately, it was agreed to rebury the individuals in a nondenominational ceremony. After a great deal of searching, a natural cemetery in Crestone was chosen, the only one of its kind in the state, where no chemicals, caskets, vaults, or containers of any kind are allowed. From a cultural perspective, it is a neutral location which allowed the museum to bury these individuals according to state legal standards. We know of no other natural history museum that has taken such a proactive stance toward the burial of non-Native human remains. Anthropology Department Chair Steve Nash and Collections Manager Melissa Bochoefer with a volunteer (standing at edge of grave).
subject terms: 
burial; reburial; repatriation
date: 
October 14, 2015
date type: 
date of photograph
location: 
USA, Colorado, Crestone
modified: 
No
format: 
image/jpg
file size: 
2.61 MB
source: 
Nikon D800 digital cmaera
rights: 
Use with permission Denver Museum of Nature and Science