The family of a US sailor killed at Pearl Harbor have finally been able to see him laid to rest, 80 years after the World War Two attack.
Herbert Jacobson was buried in Arlington National Cemetery after modern forensic testing allowed his remains to be identified.
To finally know what happened to the sailor gives the family "closure", a nephew told news agency AP.
He was among the thousands killed or injured in the Japanese assault.
The surprise Japanese strike on the the naval base in Hawaii on 7 December 1941 propelled the US into the war.
"Bert" Jacobson, who was 21, was among 400 sailors who lost their lives on board the USS Oklahoma - one of four battleships sunk by Japanese torpedoes.
It was two years before their bodies were recovered, but many could not be identified.
Repeated attempts were made to put a name to all the victims, but it was not until the deployment of the latest DNA analysis that Jacobson's remains were identified in 2019.
He was buried in Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia, across the river from Washington DC, on Tuesday. The ceremony had been delayed by the pandemic and was attended by descendants who had never had a chance to know him.