Archaeology in Newfoundland and
Labrador 1997
Edited by K. Nelmes
Searching for the Maritime Archaic Indian
Habitation Site at Port au Choix, Newfoundland: An Integrated Approach
Using Archaeology, Geomorphology and Sea Level History M.A.P.
Renouf and Trevor Bell
SUMMARY
This report describes how an innovative,
interdisciplinary research approach led to a breakthrough archaeological
find at Port au Choix, northwestern Newfoundland. A richly accoutred and
well preserved Maritime Archaic Indian burial site (4400-3300 b.p.[1])
was discovered at Port au Choix in the late 1960s, and excavations by
James A. Tuck of Memorial University of Newfoundland revealed it to be one
of the largest hunter-gatherer burial sites in North America. One of the
vexing questions that has plagued archaeologists ever since is the
whereabouts of the habitation site that must have accompanied the
cemetery. This site would yield valuable data on the day-to-day life of
the Maritime Archaic Indians which would complement the existing
information from the cemetery on ideology, health, diet, and
hunting/fishing activities. However, despite many years of site surveys,
the Port au Choix habitation site was never found. In 1996 we re-opened
the search and developed a model of site location that incorporated
elements of relative sea level history, palaeogeography and culture
history. We tested our model during the 1997 field season, funded in part
by the Culture and Heritage Division of the Department of Tourism, Culture
and Recreation, and we found the site exactly where predicted.
Characteristics of its location explain why the site had remained hidden
for so long. Initial observations suggest that the site is extensive, and
radiocarbon dates (3740 ± 50 b.p. and 3270 ± 50 b.p.) confirm its
contemporaneity with the Maritime Archaic Indian cemetery. A possible
Recent Indian component is also dated (1520 ± 60 b.p.).
INTRODUCTION
This report describes the results of our
1997 field season at Port au Choix, on the northwest coast of Newfoundland
(Fig. 1). Archaeology and sea level history were integrated to produce a
detailed model of Maritime Archaic Indian settlement location, and
subsequent testing of the model located this important site where
predicted.
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|
Figure 1. Location Map.
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THE MARITIME ARCHAIC INDIANS OF PORT AU
CHOIX
Port au Choix comprises the Point Riche
and Port au Choix Peninsulas, and together these project into the Gulf of
St. Lawrence just south of the Strait of Belle Isle. A narrow isthmus, 7 m
asl (above sea level) at its lowest point, connects these two peninsulas
to each other. A second isthmus, 3 m asl at its lowest elevation, connects
both peninsulas to the coast of the Northern Peninsula. The main area of
the town of Port au Choix is located on the Point Riche Peninsula, from
which there is an eastward view onto the harbour, known as Back Arm.
Water depth rapidly increases offshore,
creating upwelling conditions which in turn give rise to productive marine
life. These rich marine resources have attracted humans to Port au Choix
from as early as 4400 years ago to the present day. Prehistoric
inhabitants include Maritime Archaic Indians (4400-3300 b.p.), Groswater
Palaeoeskimos (2800-1900 b.p.), Dorset Palaeoeskimos (2000-1300 b.p.), and
Recent Indians (1500-800 b.p.). As a result of this archaeological
richness, there is scarcely a spot in the main town where construction
activities would not disturb a site.
Our research focuses on the Maritime
Archaic Indian (MAI) occupation of Port au Choix. These
hunter-gatherer-fishers reached Labrador at about 9000 b.p., representing
the final expansion of the Palaeoindian migration across the New World
(McGhee and Tuck 1975). According to present evidence, the MAI moved onto
the island of Newfoundland at about 5000 b.p. (Carignan 1975), presumably
coming across the Strait of Belle Isle which is 18 km wide at its
narrowest point.
Relatively few MAI habitation sites have
been excavated on the island of Newfoundland, and information from them is
limited (Carignan 1975, MacLeod reported in Tuck 1976, Austin 1980, Reader
1996). By contrast, the largest and most informative MAI site in
Newfoundland is the well-excavated and well-reported cemetery at Port au
Choix (Tuck 1970, 1971, 1976). This site is located in the town centre, to
the landward side of the main road, along a 6-8 m asl raised sandy beach (Fig.
2). As early as 1939 local residents uncovered skeletons and grave
goods in this area. They later gave these to Elmer Harp Jr., of Dartmouth
College, who attributed the finds to the Archaic Indians who were known to
have produced "Red Paint Cemeteries" in coastal Maine (Harp
1951, 1963, 1964, Harp and Hughes 1968).
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|
Figure 2. Aerial photograph
of the main settlement of Port au Choix (see Fig. 1) showing the
location of the MAI cemetery in relation to elevation and
topography. The cemetery extends along the 6-8 m marine terrace
behind the town's main street. At the time of cemetery use, the
active beach was located below the 6 m contour interval. Thus, the
cemetery was situated on an island.
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In 1967 expansion of the town led to the
site's chance discovery when a local businessman excavated a basement for
a new premises and in the process uncovered a number of well-preserved
skeletons covered in red ochre. James A. Tuck, of Memorial University of
Newfoundland, was called to the area and in 1968 he excavated what
remained of those graves. He established the boundaries of the site and
excavated three burial loci. He excavated a fourth in 1978, by which time
a total of over 117 skeletons were excavated in over 56 graves. In the
years that followed an unrecorded number of skeletons continued to be
uncovered sporadically as new houses and sheds were built in the main town
area. By 1996 it was clear that the burials extended along the full length
of the 6-8 m terrace in the town centre (Fig.
2). A series of six radiocarbon dates place the cemetery between 4400
and 3300 b.p. ( Table 1;
Tuck 1976: 172).
The skeletal material is well studied
(Anderson 1976, Kennedy 1981, 1987, Pfeiffer 1977, Marshall 1990, Reader
1990, Evans 1991, Jerkic 1993) and results point to a relatively healthy
population. Although mortality was high for those under two years of age,
those who survived this period could expect to live into their mid-forties
and perhaps their mid-fifties (Jerkic 1993:219). There was evidence of
minor activity-related arthritis (Anderson 1976, Marshall 1990), but no
evidence of disease beyond a few individual pathologies (Jerkic 1993:219).
Teeth were virtually caries-free but extremely worn (Anderson 1976),
consistent with a high fibre and low sugar and carbohydrate diet, as well
as use of teeth as tools, for example, in activities such as softening
skin (Tuck 1970, Reader 1990).
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| Figure 3.
Woodworking tools from the MAI cemetery; note gouge on far right. (Photo:
Jim Tuck) |
 |
Figure 4.
Stones resembling sitting
or floating birds. (Photo:
Jim Tuck) |
Artifacts found in the graves reflect a
vital society. The importance of woodworking is clear in the many ground
slate gouges and axes that were found (Fig. 3), and Tuck (1976:84)
speculates that these could have been used to make dugout canoes,
dwellings, as well as small items such as trays and bowls, not to mention
decorative items. Marine hunting is evident in the bone and ivory harpoons
and harpoon heads, bone foreshafts, and the long narrow ground slate
lances. There were component parts of fish spears, and caribou could have
been taken by the ground slate lances and spears that were found.
Table 1.
Radiocarbon dates from cemetery site and Gould site, Port au Choix.
| Age (C-14 years b.p.) |
Lab No. |
Material |
Setting |
Comments |
Reference |
|
MAI cemetery, Locus I
|
| 3410 ± 100 |
I-4677 |
human bone |
|
sample removed by construction
activities |
Tuck 1971 |
|
MAI cemetery, Locus II
|
| 5120 ± 120 |
Y-2609 |
wood from inside large bog iron
nodule |
Burial 42 |
wood sample predates collection of
nodule by Indians |
Tuck 1971 |
4290 ± 110
3770 ± 80
3690 ± 90 |
I-3788
Y-2608
I-4682 |
wood charcoal |
Burial 22 |
Burial 22 appeared disturbed and
may comprise as many as four burial episodes |
Tuck 1971 |
| 3930 ± 130 |
I-4678 |
human bone |
Burial 50 |
|
Tuck 1971 |
|
MAI cemetery, Locus IV
|
| 4230 ± 220 |
I-4380 |
carbonized birch(?) bark |
Burial 2 |
|
Tuck 1971 |
|
Gould site (EeBi-42)
|
| 3720 ± 50 |
Beta-107795 |
wood charcoal |
Boyd Area - Feature 3 (hearth) |
|
|
| 3720 ± 50 |
Beta-108099 |
wood charcoal |
Gould Area - Feature 2 (hearth) |
|
|
| 1520 ± 60 |
Beta-108552 |
wood charcoal |
Gould Area - Feature 3 (hearth) |
|
|
There were many non-utilitarian items,
such as beads made of polished marine snail shell or skate teeth, which
seem to have been sewn as decorations onto clothing or other skin articles
(Tuck 1976:53). There were several bone pins which were decorated in a
variety of ways and the position of some in the burials suggests that they
might have functioned as pins to hold together a robe or jacket, or
possibly to keep a cap in place (Tuck 1976:54). Stones were collected
because of their resemblance to living things: periwinkle shells, ducks
bobbing on the water (Fig. 4), birds' eggs, and in one instance a killer
whale. In addition there were hundreds of tiny white quartz pebbles,
rouged by the ochre in the graves. The symbolic importance of animals is
abundantly clear from the inclusion of animal bones in the graves, either
as pendants or possibly "medicine bundles" (Tuck 1976:61). These include
seal claws, caribou teeth, bear teeth, beaver teeth, fox phalanges, pine
marten mandibles, and the bills and wing elements of many kinds of ducks,
gulls and auk, including the now-extinct Great Auk.
Tuck hypothesized that the MAI of Port au
Choix were a mobile hunting and gathering group who moved from inland to
the coast with seasonal regularity (Tuck 1976:84-85). While this makes
sense, empirical reconstruction of MAI settlement, subsistence and society
in this region must wait until the habitation site that complements the
cemetery is found and excavated.
SEARCHING FOR THE MARITIME ARCHAIC
INDIAN HABITATION SITE
During the 1968 field season and for a
short time in 1969 Tuck tested the Port au Choix area for a MAI habitation
site, focusing in particular on the raised terraces of Back Arm, including
areas near the burial loci. At a contemporaneous MAI cemetery on
Newfoundland's northeast coast, the Curtis site, non-mortuary activity
areas had been found near the grave locations (MacLeod reported in Tuck
1976:102); however, Tuck did not find any sign of a MAI settlement site at
Port au Choix.
In 1984 the Point Riche and Port au Choix
peninsulas officially became a National Historic Park and a new program of
archaeological work was begun under the sponsorship of Parks Canada (Renouf
1985). Our first field season (1984) was spent in systematic
archaeological survey of the new Park and one of our main objectives was
to find the MAI habitation site. However, like Tuck 16 years earlier, we
found no sign in our numerous test pits that criss-crossed Park land on
the Point Riche and Port au Choix peninsulas (Renouf 1985). In addition,
we noticed the absence of any MAI non-mortuary items (such as chipped
stone points, bifaces, scrapers, etc.) in local artifact collections which
otherwise seemed to have a good representation of the prehistoric peoples
of Port au Choix. Over the next two field seasons we continued to look for
a MAI settlement, although we were also busy excavating a number of
Palaeoeskimo sites. Disappointingly, we failed to find even a trace of MAI
non-mortuary material (Renouf 1986, 1987).
EARLY APPROACHES
During our second three-year field program
(1990-1992) we began to look for a MAI habitation site in earnest, and in
1990 a small team was dedicated solely to that task (Renouf 1991). At this
point we decided to be more systematic in our efforts to find the site,
and we set out a framework of likely MAI site preferences at Port au Choix.
The framework rested on three assumptions: i) that the sea level history
of Port au Choix was similar to that established for the tip of the
Northern Peninsula where Grant (1972) had established continuous
postglacial uplift, ii) that the MAI cemetery had been situated not far
from its contemporaneous beach, and iii) that potential MAI habitation
sites were likely to be found at the same elevation above present sea
level as the cemetery, that is, at 6-8 m asl.
Based on these assumptions, we believed
that the 4500 b.p. shoreline was now at ~5 m asl, just below the level of
the cemetery site. According to this reconstruction, the Point Riche and
Port au Choix peninsulas formed a single island, separated from the
mainland by a narrow channel. The MAI cemetery therefore would have been
located on an island. Given that MAI subsistence is thought to have been
oriented towards both terrestrial and marine resources (Fitzhugh 1972,
Tuck 1976) and that MAI base camps in Newfoundland (Pastore 1986) and
Labrador (Stopp 1997, Fitzhugh 1972) were often set in a generalized
location that allowed access to both ocean and interior, we thought it
likely that a base camp would be on the "mainland" side of Port
au Choix, rather than the "island" side. In addition, we thought
that MAI would have chosen a sheltered location, near fresh water, which
had a gently sloping foreshore on which to pull up a boat. Finally, we
thought that such a spot would be located at or above 6-8 m asl.
These site selection criteria pointed us
to the southeast area of town where new houses were built between 4 and 14
m above the south shore of Back Arm. However, after a summer of digging
countless test pits, often in deep peat and densely wooded undisturbed
areas, the team failed to turn up any evidence of MAI material.
We continued a less intensive search over
the next two field seasons but came no closer to finding MAI non-mortuary
material (Renouf 1992, 1993). We ended that three-year field program with
the realization that if we wanted to focus on the MAI occupation of the
area, we needed to develop a more finely-tuned model of site location. In
particular, we needed to re-examine our basic assumption about local sea
level history.
SEA LEVEL REVISITED
It has been generally assumed that sea
level in the Port au Choix area more or less continuously fell to its
modern level from a high stand at ~140 m asl around 12,500 b.p. (Grant
1972, 1994). This is known as a type-A sea level history, and is typical
of most locations that were inundated by continental-scale ice sheets
during the last glaciation (Quinlan and Beaumont 1981, 1982); this type of
curve had long been established for the L'Anse aux Meadows area farther
north on the Northern Peninsula (Grant 1972). However, in 1994, two other
sea level models were proposed for the Port au Choix region (Grant 1994) (Fig
5). In one, sea level fell from its late-glacial high stand to below
its present level by 8000 b.p. and then slowly rose to its modern level.
This type-B sea level history is commonly associated with areas affected
by the glacial forebulge at the former ice sheet margin (Quinlan and
Beaumont 1981, 1982). The forebulge, an elevated area composed of
displaced mantle material from beneath the ice load, collapses following
deglaciation and migrates back towards the ice sheet centre. The passage
of the forebulge through an area is responsible for the period of
submergence that results in sea levels lower than present during the mid-
to late Holocene.
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| Figure 5.
Sea level models proposed for the Port au Choix region. |
The second new model is a modification of
the type-B sea level history in that the late Holocene record is
punctuated by a brief sea level oscillation above present between ~3500
and 2000 b.p. This model is postulated based on the occurrence of a fossil
sea cliff which lies just above present tide level along the west coast of
the peninsula (cf. Grant 1994).
INTEGRATING ARCHAEOLOGY AND SEA LEVEL
HISTORY
We decided that all three sea level models
warranted further investigation. We superimposed archaeological sites of
known age and elevation on the three sea level curves to see what pattern,
if any, might emerge. By superimposing known site locations on the
modified type-B sea level curve we discovered that, according to this
model, Groswater and Dorset Palaeoeskimo sites would have been located
9-10 m asl at the time of occupation, whereas the MAI cemetery would have
been at least 14-15 m asl, during its active phase. This would imply that
the cemetery was placed on higher ground, and that any MAI settlements
would likely have been located closer to the active beach (possibly within
10 m using the elevation of Palaeoeskimo sites as a guide); today these
would be at, or below, present sea level. Comparison of the same site data
with the type-A and type-B sea level curves revealed no consistent pattern
of site elevation above the sea level and suggested that perhaps factors
other than sea level were important in site selection by all cultural
groups at Port au Choix. Regardless of the outcome, this exercise
impressed on us the need to test empirically the assumption that the
elevation of the MAI cemetery was a guide to 4500 b.p. sea level position.
TESTING OUR IDEAS: THE 1996 FIELD
SEASON
In the summer of 1996 we set out to
investigate further the relationship of archaeological sites and sea level
history, using a two-pronged approach. First, we wanted to test the three
proposed sea level models by means of empirical sea level reconstruction.
Two coastal ponds were selected for coring in the Port au Choix region;
coring was done in spring 1997, and relevant analyses are ongoing. Second,
we wanted to conduct a new kind of archaeological survey that would allow
us to cover a broad area of the town, in order to find any traces of MAI
settlement.
We concluded that the most efficient way
to conduct a broad survey of the entire town would be to take advantage of
the fact that many residents had come across archaeological material in
their day-to-day activities, by virtue of the widespread occurrence of
archaeological sites throughout the main townsite. We decided to map
systematically the presence and absence of non-mortuary MAI material in
people's archaeological collections. We conducted informal interviews
(kitchen-table conversations) with residents, asking about any
archaeological material that they might have uncovered in the course of
building their house or wharf, or as they dug their garden, or when they
were out on the land, walking, hunting, fishing, etc. In particular, we
wanted to see if people had recovered any MAI artifacts from the modern
beach or as they fished in the shallow water offshore.
We plotted this information on a 1:2,500
scale community map and an enlarged aerial photograph of the town. The
interviews enabled us to eliminate from further consideration large areas
of the town where there were no MAI finds of any sort. Meanwhile, possible
MAI material showed up in two locations in the southeast edge of the town
at the 8-10 m level. One homeowner showed us the blade of a large Ramah
chert projectile point (Fig. 6) that was found when his parents' basement
had been excavated many years ago. The blade was similar in proportions to
material from the MAI graveyard site in southern Labrador, thought to date
to around 5000-4000 b.p. (McGhee and Tuck 1975:221).
Recent excavation of a nearby house
foundation on the same 8-10 m level turned up a large amount of toolmaking
debris, first noticed by the owners when they began to landscape. Although
the flakes themselves were culturally undiagnostic, they were clearly not
Palaeoeskimo in origin. We could tell this because the material was not
the fine-grained Cow Head cherts from the Cow Head Formation, located
50-70 km farther south on the Northern Peninsula, which were almost
exclusively used by both the Groswater and Dorset Palaeoeskimo people who
occupied Port au Choix. Thus, by process of elimination we concluded that
the flakes were prehistoric Indian; however, there was no way to
differentiate MAI from Recent Indian. The single artifact associated with
the flakes was a bipointed biface (Fig. 7) which, although rather generic
in form, has parallels in the MAI material from the Beaches site in
northeastern Newfoundland dated to between 4900 ± 230 b.p. (SI-1384) and
3840 ± 40 B.P. (I-7509) (Carignan 1975: 203).
 |
|
Figure 6. Ramah chert blade
from a homeowner's basement.
|
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Figure 7. Chert biface from
homeowner's basement.
|
The coincidental occurrence of the two
possible non-mortuary MAI finds in the same area of town at approximately
the same elevation prompted further investigation. From aerial photographs
and ground surveys we could roughly trace this 8-10 m level for over a
kilometre as it curved through the southeastern edge of town, terminating
in bedrock cliffs at either end above Back Arm and Gargamelle Cove (Fig.
2). Four 1 m² (sterile) test pits on this level revealed a thick peat
cover (up to 1.5 m) over a variable substrate which ranged from pebble
beach gravel to weathered limestone. Also, a heavy growth of tuckamore
(often impenetrable thickets of dwarfed trees, commonly larch and alder)
obscured the underlying terrain, except in limited areas where the beach
gravel had been quarried or the land had been cleared.
REFINING OUR APPROACH
A combination of preliminary results from
the sea level research, which strongly suggested a type-A sea level
history for the Port au Choix region, and the distribution of non-mortuary
MAI finds at the 8-10 m level focussed our attention on this elevation in
the southeast end of town; ironically, this had been one of the main areas
targeted in our 1990 survey. Given the practical difficulties of digging
test pits in such overgrown and peat-covered terrain it was necessary to
narrow down the areas of highest potential. We therefore refined our
earlier list of MAI site selection criteria (Table
2).
By virtue of its location in the southeast
end of town, the study site would have been located on the
"mainland" during higher sea levels at approximately 4000 b.p.
Anywhere along the 8-10 m level would have provided access to both inland
and ocean, a view of the cemetery on the nearby island, and a sheltered
location protected by higher ground inland and an island offshore. We
therefore focussed on micro-components of settlement location. As we noted
before, access to fresh water would have been important, along with a
gently-sloping foreshore good for landing boats. We predicted that a broad
flat terrace would have been preferable for living on rather than
irregular topography, and that pebble gravel or weathered limestone would
have been a more suitable substrate for comfortable living, as opposed to
deep beach sand, into which the MAI graves had been dug. One area in
particular on the 8-10 m level fulfilled all these criteria and during our
1997 field season this broad, flat terrace became one of our main areas of
attention (Fig. 2).
TESTING THE APPROACH: THE 1997 FIELD
SEASON
The objective of the 1997 field season was
to retest the entire southeast area of town between 6 and 10 m asl for the
presence or absence of MAI non-mortuary material. If our results were
negative, the next step would be to review the assumptions of our
settlement location model, adjust our site selection criteria, and test
our revised model in a future field season.
Because of the thick layer of peat, as
well as areas of tuckamore, we decided that test pits would not be
effective and instead opted for 1 m x 5 m test trenches. Although most
test trenches were randomly placed, we were careful to get a good
distribution where the 8-10 m level broadened into a large flat terrace.
Our first trench (Boyd Area - Trench 1)
was placed at the edge of the broad terrace at 8-10 m asl near the outflow
of a small pond, on the other side of the Boyd property. We extended the
trench to 15 m (roughly) east-west and 5 m north-south (Boyd Area - Trench
2), finding a well-formed hearth (Boyd Area - Feature 3) (Fig. 8) and a
single chert flake similar to those found on the other side of the fence.
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|
Figure 8. Boyd Area -
Feature 3 (hearth).
|
Not knowing if the hearth was MAI or
Recent Indian we spread out from this area, excavating in tuckamore, at
the edges of a gravel pit, in areas of tangled heath vegetation and scrub
spruce, and in a number of backyards where people had cleared the scrub
and removed the top 50 cm of peat. There was many an occasion when we
needed to remind ourselves of the value of negative evidence during the 20
days it took us to excavate 46 trenches (Fig.
9), totaling 260m², all of which came up empty. Now and then we would
find a single chert flake of a type that we were attributing to
prehistoric Indian, which would tantalize us with evidence of prehistoric
occupation somewhere in the area and rekindle our hopes with every new
trench opened. We regularly found many weathered limestone rocks lying on
top of the bedrock, but since these were part of the limestone substrate
(Fig. 10), and since they make unsuitable hearth rocks, we considered them
non-cultural although we noted their ubiquity.
 |
|
Figure 9. Location of 1 x 5
m test trenches on the 6-8 m and 8-10 m levels at the southeast
edge of Port au Choix.
|
 |
|
Figure 10. Weathered
limestone rocks in trench.
|
Table 2. List
of variables considered important in the choice of location for Maritime
Archaic habitation site(s) at Port au Choix.
| Relative sea level |
MAI were marine-oriented and likely
occupied sites within easy access of the sea; during MAI occupancy
both peninsulas at Port au Choix formed a single island and the
southeast end of town was a coastal "mainland" location |
| Accessibility to resources |
MAI subsistence was oriented
towards both terrestrial and marine resources, therefore MAI would
likely choose a central location for a base camp |
| Sheltered location |
MAI preferred sheltered sites for
habitation, for example an area sheltered by topography and
offshore islands |
| Open water viewshed |
MAI likely chose sites with a view
of open water in as many directions as possible, eg. through what
is today Back Arm and Gargamelle Cove |
| View of cemetery |
MAI may have desired a view of the
cemetery |
| Access to freshwater |
MAI would have needed drinking
water, eg. ponds, streams and springs |
| Coastal access |
MAI may have used dugout canoes,
which would have been easiest to beach by pulling them up a
gently-sloping foreshore |
| Local topography |
A flat terrace is a more
comfortable place to live than a narrow ridge or irregular terrain |
| Suitable substrate |
MAI used deep beach sand for the
cemetery but likely would have chosen to live on a more
comfortable gravel or weathered limestone substrate |
On the 21st day of digging we found a
concentration of flakes in a trench on the 8-10 m broad, flat terrace
(Gould Area - Trench 1). When we expanded this into a cross-trench we
uncovered another well-formed hearth (Gould Area - Feature 2) (Fig. 11).
While this was all very exciting, at this point there was still no way to
distinguish between a MAI and Recent Indian hearth. This issue was soon
resolved when 2.5 m away in the same trench we found a pile of 36 small
white quartz pebbles, similar to those found by the hundreds in a number
of the MAI graves (Fig. 12). These pebbles were associated with a small
piece of red ochre, as well as a pile of what appeared to be unburned cut
bone (Gould Area - Feature 1); this pile was removed as a block and will
be excavated in the M.U.N. Archaeology Unit prehistory lab. The next day
our conclusions were substantiated when we found two MAI ground slate
gouges (Fig. 13) approximately 9 m southwest of the hearth (Gould Area -
Trench 10). We knew that we had located a Maritime Archaic Indian site and
we called it the Gould Site (EeBi-42).
 |
|
Figure 11. Gould Area -
Feature 2 (hearth).
|
 |
|
Figure 12. Small quartz
pebbles from Gould Area.
|
We were also able to trace the site's
extent. We had begun to notice that the weathered limestone rocks,
although common, were not ubiquitous as we had originally thought. In
several trenches situated well back, some on narrow ridges, others at the
edge of a small pond, we did not find any weathered limestone rocks. Also,
the second hearth, which was formed of large, heavy, fire-reddened
granitic cobbles like the first, was associated with white weathered
limestone rocks which had obviously been heated as a result of proximity
to the fire. In other words, the weathering was the result of cultural
activity. When we traced the distribution of the weathered rocks we found
that it was limited to the broad flat terrace at 8-10 m asl, covering an
area of approximately 1.8 ha (Fig.
14). As expected, the MAI settlement is extensive, although at this
point we cannot tell how intensive and continuous is the cultural activity
over that large area.
 |
|
Figure 13. Gouges from
Gould Area - Trench 10.
|
 |
| Figure 14.
Extent of Gould Site. Four houses on the site are highlighted in
yellow. |
Radiocarbon dates on charcoal from the two
hearths establish the contemporeneity of this site with the MAI cemetery (Table
1). The first hearth (Boyd Area - Feature 3) returned a date of 3740
± 50 b.p. (Beta-107795) and the second (Gould Area - Feature 2) is dated
at 3270 ± 50 b.p. (Beta-108099). These compare with the range of cemetery
dates between 4290 ± 110 b.p. and 3410 ± 100 b.p. It remains to future
excavations at the Gould site to esablish whether or not it overlaps in
time with the earliest use of the cemetery.
POSSIBLE RECENT INDIAN COMPONENT
Meanwhile, we found a well-formed hearth
suspended in the peat layer of Gould Area - Trench 13. This hearth (Gould
Area - Feature 3) was associated with a tip fragment of a projectile point
or biface; however because the tip was sharp, it was most likely the
former. The chert was light tan, almost weathered-looking, and had
microscopic black radiolari as well as larger square, rectangular, and
trapezoidal holes made by leached-out mineral inclusions. Because this was
not the distinctive Cow Head chert that the Palaeoeskimo used at Port au
Choix, and neither was it tip-fluted [2],
our preliminary conclusion is that it is prehistoric Indian. Charcoal from
the hearth was radiocarbon dated to 1520 ± 60 b.p. (Beta-108552), which
places it in the Recent Indian time period, overlapping with dates from
Dorset sites at Port au Choix (Renouf 1991).
EPILOGUE
The integration of the archaeology and sea
level history was successfully applied at Port au Choix where the
coastline was important for prehistoric settlement and where an
understanding of Holocene sea level history was therefore crucial. As a
result of this integration we were able to locate a long searched-for, and
well-concealed MAI habitation site. No wonder the site had remained hidden
for so long. It is covered by 1.5 m of peat as well as stands of dense
tuckamore (Fig. 15).
 |
|
Figure 15. Aerial view of
Port au Choix showing location of the MAI Gould Site in relation
to the cemetery site.
|
It remains for us to establish the site
stratigraphy and chronology, to establish the density of occupation over
this large area, and to proceed with excavation of key areas. There is the
potential for good bone preservation, given the limestone bedrock of the
Port au Choix area, and the find of a few pieces of cut bone is promising.
We hope to find evidence of dwelling structures, activities areas, and
middens; in other words, evidence of everday life, including preparations
to bury the dead. Establishing these fundamentals is basic to
understanding many outstanding issues regarding the MAI culture in
Labrador, Newfoundland and points south. With the discovery of the Gould
site we are now in a position to establish some of these basics which,
together with the information from the associated cemetery, will provide
us with a fuller picture of this culture than has been available to date.
Notes:
1. b.p. =
radiocarbon years before present
2.
A characteristic of Dorset endblades in Newfoundland.
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