Cap,
I previously decided not to argue the difference between history and heritage as it doesnt affect the Solomon's recoveries legally in any way, however history and heritage are directly linked.
Unfortunately my decision not to debate the issue has been referred to elsewhere as evidence that I consider these objects "not" to be heritage of the islands, which is not my position so I know feel obliged to set the record straight.
One can define heritage in a narrow way in regard to one's own ancestry, and therefore only claim heritage, traditions etc from your own bloodline and its own experiences, ie back through local generations and immigration from overseas, and in that case it might be argued that WW2 and these aircraft are not someones heritage unless they themselves, or their ancestors were directly involved, ie the cultural "inheritance", that is the basis of heritage - born from the history of those ancestors.
However societies extend a shared heritage to all citizens, regardless of individual linkages, however ethnic or racial "heritage" may not be uniformly shared, and instead owned primarily through the ancestral inheritance.
While individuals, or even a whole society may not claim "ancestral" involvement to an historical object, Nations "inherit" the heritage of objects or places within their borders.
Does the history and artifact objects of the native American Indian form part of the Heritage of your Nation and the American people, regardless of the fact most of your population is not decended from those tribes, or in any way related to those who fought in the indian wars?
Do the abandoned relics of lost cultures in Asia, Africa, Europe or South America not form the heritage of the nations they sit in and are inherited by?
WW2 was a major point in these islands history, regardless of the level of the populations involvement at the time, that history is now part of the island's history and the history of its people, and their nation.
The wrecks are historical objects relating to that history, and are part of the heritage of the battlegrounds, and are therefore "inherited" by the local people and the Nation they live in.
It is fairly simple, History creates historical objects, and links those objects unarguably to the heritage of a place or location.
The people associated with that location are connected to the object and its history either through direct involvement or inheritance, either creates Heritage.
http://books.google.com/books?id=f0UFikLzOJ0C&pg=PT144&lpg=PT144&dq=history+heritage+definition+mcmanamon&source=web&ots=zVnrV3rC7a&sig=kVY31oGQnSc-Do2qg5AF0uZ4Op0#PPT144,M1
regards
Mark Pilkington