The remains of 10 indigenous children who died more than a century ago at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School have been returned to their families.The handoff this week at a graveyard on the grounds of the U.S. Army's Carlisle Barracks was part of the fourth set of transfers to take place since 2017.The latest disinterment process began in mid-June and saw families reunited with the remains of nine Rosebud Sioux children. The remains of an Alaskan Aleut child were returned to her tribe earlier this summer.Remains of an unknown child were also found during the exhumation. The Army said the remains were reburied. The government-run Carlisle Indian Industrial School opened in 1879 and housed more than 10,000 Native American children before it shut down in 1918.Historians say the site was used to forcibly assimilate the children into American society.Since 2017, the Army has disinterred 22 remains of Native American children from the cemetery in Carlisle, including the 10 that occurred this year. In previous years, remains were turned over to the Northern Arapaho, Blackfeet, Oglala Sioux, Oneida, Omaha, Modoc and Iowa tribes.WGAL documented the historic process in our Chronicle: Bring Them Home special. You can watch it here.