FROM THE ARCHIVE
Zuni Pueblo seeking to rebury remains
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THURSDAY, JUNE 26, 2003 Remains uncovered at a site slated for a coal mine are in limbo as federal officials and a power company try to work out a reburial agreement. The state of New Mexico, the federal government and Salt River Project signed an agreement in the 1990s setting out the reburial process. But Zuni Pueblo, which claims the remains, wasn't a party to the agreement. The current agreement calls for reburial to be handled by the Hopi Tribe of Arizona, which didn't sign the agreement either. Salt River Project has been given federal approval to develop a 18,000-acre coal mine that Zuni Pueblo and other tribes fear will drain water from a sacred lake. Get the Story:
Indian Bones Stuck in Legal Limbo (The Santa Fe New Mexican 6/26) Related Stories:
List highlights threats to sacred and historic sites (05/30)
Zuni Pueblo continues fight against mine (05/16)
BIA hydrologist to investigate mine near sacred lake (04/28)
Zuni Pueblo pushes Norton to reject mine (02/14)
Zuni Pueblo takes mine fight on the road (07/17)
N.M. tribe challenges coal mine approval (6/3)
Zuni Pueblo waits on mine (5/3)
Zuni Pueblo teams up to fight mine (12/3)
Mine near N.M. sacred lake supported (11/14)
No decision made on Zuni mine (10/25)
Group: Norton to approve Zuni mine (10/24)
Bingaman writes Norton about mining near Zuni lake (10/4)
Mine near sacred lake raises concern (9/18)
Zuni Pueblo fighting mine approval (8/29)
Mine developer hopes for approval (6/26)
Pueblo promises lawsuit against mine (6/25)
Mine near sacred lake debated (6/22)
Zuni Pueblo battling coal mine (6/11)
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