Like I said, if it's on my land it's mine. Mineral rights are another matter, but if somone is buried on my land and there is nobody left who can demonstrate that it is their relative, I don't care, I'll do with it/them as I please.
Maybe your state allows desecration of cemeteries, the disinterment of human remains, and perhaps even trafficking in the aforementioned.
I can't really say without knowing what state you're in.
In most of the state, though, doing any of those things is a felony.
You may not care, and you may do as you please.
But the way you're talking it sounds like you have a right, by law, to do those things.
And most likely, almost certainly, you don't.
What state is the property we're discussing located in?
I probably won't adverstise it, but I will do what I need to do. And isn't that what oftenhappens already? Someone is building a parking lot and they come across something that looks like an old burial; somebody then decides to conceal the find so as not to end up losing their property rights.
No, that isn't "what people do".
They report the find, they apply for a bill that allows them to move the remains, and then they move them.
Unless maybe we're talking about the Russian mob in which case, yeah, they probably just pave over the remains of throw them in the trash.
If these tribes aren't prepared to finacially compensate finders of their "culture", they may not ever even know about the find. Just saying.
That's another matter entirely, and I don't entirely disagree with your sentiment.