BIOARCHAEOLOGY, BIOETHICS, AND THE : BALANCING THE INTERESTS OF JUSTICE AND KNOWLEDGE Meghan Ryan, MHE (candidate); Daryl Pullman, PhD

“Of all forms of cultural appropriation practiced in the last century or two, it would be hard to think of any that has caused greater pain or offense to subaltern ABSTRACT communities than the removal and retention of their human physical remains for purposes of study or exhibition.” The Beothuk of and are believed to ~ Geoffrey Scarre, philosopher/ethicist have become extinct in the 19th century. However, skeletal remains of a number of Beothuk individuals are housed in Justice Knowledge various museums. The most famous are the skulls of Chief Nonosabasut and his wife which reside currently in “Repatriation is just the right thing to “Repatriation would be a mistake as it would the National Museum of . do” --Misel Joe (current Chief of the result in a tremendous loss to science.” Ingeborg Conne River Mi’kMaq of Newfoundland) Marshall (world authority on the Beothuk) There has been an on-going debate in recent years about whether all these remains should be repatriated to Excerpt from John Harries’: “We should be learning from skeletons, not Newfoundland for burial, or whether they should be preserved “. . . all agree that by the afternoon, reburying them—they are the remains of people for future study. The interests of justice would seem to favour the Beothuk, maybe 14 of them, maybe still contributing to humanity and its knowledge of WHO SPEAKS FOR THE BEOTHUK? the former course, while the interests of knowledge favour the more, were running and the Englishmen itself.” were running after them. Demasduit was Dr. Richard Foley, Leverhulme Centre for Human latter. In any case, who should speak for the Beothuk if they falling behind and the younger Peyton Evolutionary Studies, University of Cambridge New rules for NAGPRA now give tribes authority to claim are in fact extinct? …made after her. Then Nonosabasut, unaffiliated remains that cannot be linked to an existing described as a ‘powerful looking fellow’ “...we need to promote the long-term preservation people. However, has no such legislation. We argue for a compromise position that would see the . . . came up to them. . . The details of skeletal collections and in this way ensure that famous skulls repatriated to the current native peoples of of what happened bend, twist and future generations will have the opportunity to Newfoundland and Labrador but which would nevertheless fracture. Shots were fired. We know that. learn form them and in this way know about and preserve some ancient remains for future study. How many and by whom, well that is understand that history.” disputed. But shots were fired and the – Phillip Walker (archaeologist) A POTENTIAL COMPROMISE man [Nonosabasut] fell and died on the ice.” • Beothuk extinction WHO WERE THE BEOTHUK? • Repatriation of all remains would effectively curtail any future investigations as to the Beothuk past and relations • The Beothuk were hunter-gatherer to other peoples inhabitants of Newfoundland who, • Many aboriginal representatives acknowledge there is room through illness and conflict with for negotiation with regard to repatriation and reburial European settlers throughout the Willie Ermine’s notion of an “ethical lodge” that occupies 17th-18th century, became virtually the space between the values at tension extinct Sarah Tarlow: “. . . providing materials for the cultural • , the last known member after-lives of past peoples.” of the Beothuk died in 1829 of tuberculosis WHY TAKE ONLY THE SKULLS? Proclamation of Governor John Byron, TENTATIVE CONCLUSIONS 8 July 1769 • Demasduit captured March 1819 • Federal and provincial • She died of tuberculosis in January of 1820 governments should be “Whereas it has been represented to • Her body was returned to the place of her capture where a making formal appeals to the the King, that the subjects residing funeral hut containing the remains of several others including government of Scotland for in the said Island of Newfoundland, her husband was found repatriation of the skulls of instead of cultivating such a friendly intercourse with • (founder of the Boeothick Institution) Nonosabusat and Demasduit the savages inhabiting that island . . . do treat the said retrieved the skulls of Nonosabusat and Demasduit in 1827, • Return to local aboriginal savages with the greatest inhumanity, and frequently and shipped them to his mentor at the University of representatives to be destroy them without the least provocation or remorse. • Perhaps only the skulls were taken to be used in the new study of phrenology and treated in a manner deemed ...I do express his abhorrence of such inhuman barbarity, craniology which was popular in the early 19th century appropriate and I do strictly enjoin and require all His Majesty’s • American physician Samuel G. Morton, the most influential proponent of this • Establish a process for subjects to live in amity and brotherly kindness with the psuedo-science had studied at Edinburgh around the time when Cormack had negotiation with regard to native savages of the said island of Newfoundland.” studied there the disposition of remaining “ . . . Races are not varieties of humankind, but rather separate inferior species.”- skeletons that gives due weight -Morton to the continuing scientific • Such thinking helped to justify both interests slavery and the extermination of native peoples Statue of Shanawdithit