My Daftest Question To Date. Lpg
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Thanks for the good replies. I kind of meant archaeological reasons, yes. There seems to be a discrepancy between the consideration we would give to someone who was buried 20 years ago, but when it's someone who was buried 3000 years ago, no one really questions it at all. So...does the passage of time make it ok? Or is it because there is no one interested enough to object? They are both people's bodies, after all.
Interesting link too!
When I was in the US I went to a lecture about the native American indians who had lived in the area (New Jersey). The chap giving it emphasised the dig had happened as a result of town expansion that the photos of burial sites and remains and artefacts had all be taken reverently according to the requirements laid down by surviving member of the tribe and that the remains had then been reverently reburied where they would not be disturbed again.
The egyptians, as I understand it had their remains preserved for an afterlife, so maybe standing/lying around in museums is it??