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Searching for burial sites with radar a delicate, sensitive process: anthropologist

Searching for burial sites with radar a delicate, sensitive process: anthropologist
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Search for graves to resume at Nova Scotia site

Winnipeg Free Press By: Michael MacDonald, The Canadian Press Posted: Last Modified: 3:34 PM CDT Tuesday, Jun. 1, 2021 Save to Read Later HALIFAX - A survivor of the largest residential school in the Maritimes says the search will continue for unmarked graves at the sprawling rural site north of Halifax. Mi kmaq activist Dorene Bernard stands on the shores of the Shubenacadie River, a 72-kilometre tidal river that cuts through the middle of Nova Scotia and flows into the Bay of Fundy, in Fort Ellis, N.S. on July 31, 2018. Bernard, a survivor of the largest residential school in the Maritimes, says the search will continue for unmarked graves at the site of the former Shubenacadie Indian Residential school north of Halifax. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Andrew Vaughan

Delicate, sensitive process: Expert talks on searching for burial sites with radar | iNFOnews

Daniela Germano Kisha Supernant, an anthropology professor at the University of Alberta in Edmonton is shown in this handout image on Tuesday April 20, 2021. Searching for unmarked burial sites is a painstaking process that not all Indigenous communities could be immediately ready for after the remains of more than 200 children were found at a former residential school in British Columbia, says an anthropologist who has done similar projects on the Prairies. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-University of Alberta-John Ulan MANDATORY CREDIT June 01, 2021 - 1:00 AM EDMONTON - Searching for unmarked burial sites is a painstaking process that not all Indigenous communities could be immediately ready for after the remains of more than 200 children were found at a former residential school in British Columbia, says an anthropologist who has done similar projects on the Prairies.

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