Queensland Museum is committed to creating meaningful career pathways for First Nations peoples in the museum and cultural heritage sectors. Through the Undergraduate Student Research Program and First Nations Fellowships, we provide paid opportunities for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples to gain hands-on museum and cultural heritage experience, develop research projects, and share First Nations knowledge and perspectives.
These programs foster skills development, mentorship and cultural exchange, empowering participants to shape the future of museums while deepening connections between communities and collections.
With your support, we can continue to expand these vital initiatives and opportunities.
The unconditional repatriation of secret sacred objects to communities of origin helps create healing, justice and reconciliation. For Aboriginal Peoples and Torres Strait Islander peoples, it is a vital step in fulfilling cultural and spiritual practices so their ancestors may continue their journeys.
Queensland Museum Network is recognised by the Australian Government as Queensland’s peak body for repatriation. Repatriation is a complex and sensitive process, and we work closely with communities to provide financial and administrative resources to support them.
Current projects include repatriation of the Burnett River Rocks—these 92 engraved boulders were originally located on a significant sacred site on the Burnett River, Bundaberg. They were removed in the early 1970s and scattered across the state. We are partnering with the Bailai, Gooreng Gooreng, Gurang and Taribelang peoples to identify and return the Burnett River Rocks to Country and more than 30 boulders have been repatriated to date.
Other projects include a collaboration with the United States National Museum of Natural History – Smithsonian Institute, Torres Strait Regional Authority and Traditional Owners of Mer (the most eastern island in the Torres Strait) to return coral collected from the region early last century. The collection is culturally and scientifically significant.
While we have completed over 200 repatriations in past years, we continue to receive ancestral remains and secret sacred objects and other cultural material from organisations and individuals in Australia and around the world, surrendered into the museum’s care to be returned to Country and their families.
If physical repatriation is not possible and QMN is considered by community as the safest place, we continue to care for ancestral remains and secret sacred objects in our dedicated Keeping Place, in agreement with and on behalf of community. They may visit at any time.
The advancement of technologies is creating new opportunities to record and preserve objects digitally. Digital repatriation can enable communities to have access to images, recordings, archive documents, research information and reproductions (such as 3D scanned and printed objects), providing a valuable connection—particularly for those in remote and regional communities.
Recent projects include a collaboration with the Western Yalanji people to document a centuries-old dendroglyph (Aboriginal tree carving) at risk of decay using photogrammetry. Three-dimensional renders of the dendroglyph will preserve the carving’s intricate details in perpetuity.
You can also support First Nations reconciliation and repatriation by joining the Guardians of Queensland Museum.
Become a member, join our team or support us by donating, providing a cultural gift or bequest, or through a corporate partnership.
Discover more about Queensland Museum's vital work and ways to support, including:
- Annual giving
- Join the Guardians
- Leave a bequest
Get in touch with the Queensland Museum Foundation for more information on donating, becoming a partner or making a bequest.