PhotoBlog: Tour of the National Eagle Repository in Colorado

"A wildlife specialist splays the wings of a dead golden eagle shipped in from New Mexico and is pleased by what he sees.

"This one is an awfully good bird," Dennis Wiist of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service says. "There's not too much damage, which is extremely rare."

Wiist will bag the eagle, freeze it and then have it delivered to a waiting Native American Indian tribe.

Eagles are sacrosanct for many tribes, and Wiist and his colleagues at the National Eagle Repository provide them with feathers, wings and talons - and in some cases whole carcasses - for religious rituals. But the Indians' demand outstrips the repository's supply."

Get the Story:
PhotoBlog: Struggling to meet demand for sacred frozen eagles (MSNBC 4/26)

Related Stories:
Northern Arapaho Tribe labels federal eagle permit a 'sham' (4/5)
Opinion: Religion and tribal rights with permit to take eagles (3/21)
Bald eagle found near DC train station ends up in repository (3/19)
Mediaite: Comedian backs tribe's right to take bald eagles (3/15)
Northern Arapaho Tribe receives permit to take bald eagles (3/14)

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