Library/PT 101/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Many Native Americans consider digging up ancestors’ bones and the objects buried with them a spiritual wrong. They can sometimes use the law to stop digs or get items returned, but only if a court says they have “standing” (the right to sue). Courts usually allow heirs, the landowner, or groups with a clear interest in a grave to sue. Recent graves linked to a living Native community are more likely to give that community standing; very old graves in places the community hasn’t lived recently usually do not. When standing exists, property law can help: courts have ruled that buried items aren’t “abandoned” and can be returned to tribal representatives, and communal tribal property can’t be sold away by a single person, so museums can’t assume they own such items just because they bought them from an individual.

Logic Breakdown

Determine the paragraph's function: the second paragraph begins with "Property law, for example,..." so look for an example or illustration that ties back to the claim that common law can provide a basis for Native American claims.

Passage Stimulus

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13.

The author uses the second paragraph to

Correct Answer
A
Correct. The second paragraph explicitly provides an example showing how common law can support Native American claims to grave contents. Support from the passage: "Property law, for example, can be useful in establishing Native American claims to artifacts that are retrieved in the excavation of ancient graves..." The Charrier v. Bell ruling quoted in the paragraph states that "the common law doctrine of abandonment... does not apply to objects buried with the deceased" and that burying items "is not intended as a means of relinquishing ownership to a stranger." The paragraph concludes, "This ruling suggests that artifacts excavated from Native American ancestral graves should be returned to representatives of tribal groups who can establish standing in such cases." Together these sentences show the paragraph's role is to illustrate (via case law) that common law may support such claims.
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