The skeletons originally had been buried outside Fort William Henry between its construction in 1755 and its destruction by the French two years later, a historical event depicted in James Fenimore Cooper's "The Last of the Mohicans." Two years ago, fort officials publicly acknowledged for the first time that the skeletons had been taken in the late 1990s by an Arizona State University anthropologist.
Ongoing construction of a public park adjacent to an area containing the fort's unmarked military cemetery, estimated by archaeologists to contain more than 1,000 graves, could delay the reburial plans, she said.
"It would be totally irresponsible to bring these skeletons home without either a proper (storage) facility or to be able to return them to their original burial place," Viele said.
Baker was unavailable for comment today. She's doing archaeological field work in Sudan until April 1, according to her voicemail.
The skeletons were unearthed when the site was reconstructed as a tourist attraction in the mid-1950s. In the decades that followed, they became one of the fort's most-viewed displays and a sightseeing fixture in Lake George, a popular tourist village 80 kilometres north of Albany.
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