How ground-penetrating radar is used to find unmarked graves at residential schools
OTTAWA — Indigenous communities searching for unmarked graves have encountered a rising number of individuals questioning, or outright denying, that children disappeared or died in residential schools, says a new report from an independent special interlocutor.
Ground-penetrating radar is the technology behind the identification of what are believed to be unmarked burial sites, including for the remains of children, on the grounds of former residential schools.
The process gives communities with the first glimpses of physical evidence of possible graves, but it is not well understood.
It is also being used to fuel misinformation about the findings.