
Central Arctic| High Arctic| Eastern
Arctic |Keewatin | Western
Arctic
Grizzly Bear Mountain and Scented
Grass Hills
A survey was conducted along the shores of Great Bear
Lake from Keith Arm to McVicar Arm of Grizzly Bear Mountain,
and from Deerpass Bay to Douglas Bay along the shores of the
Scented Grass Hills. This was the second year of a two-year
project initiated in 1995. The survey consisted of the mapping
and recording of 51 previously unrecorded sites and revisiting
3 known sites. It was intended to supplement the survey done
by Chris Hanks and people from the Deline Dene Band during
the previous summer. Elders from Deline were interviewed and
recorded to gather Dene place names, legends, stories and
significance of numerous locations. Assistance for the survey
was provided by Leroy Andre, Paul Baton, Alfred Taniton, Jacqueline
Kenny, David Tetso, and Jason Baton from the community of
Deline, and directed by Rod Pickard with assistance by Stephen
Toews (both of Parks Canada, Yellowknife).
The survey is one of the final stages of a research project
sponsored by the Deline Band and Parks Canada in preparation
for the potential designation of Grizzly Bear Mountain and
the Scented Grass Hills as a National Historic Site. Collaboration
between the community of Deline and Parks Canada started in
1990, when preliminary oral history studies were undertaken.
The project continued in 1991 with a study on the traditional
geography of Keith and McVicar Arms of Great Bear Lake. That
work provided the basis for the archaeological survey that
was conducted in 1995 and 1996.
Planning for the designation of Grizzly Bear Mountain
and the Scented Grass Hills has proceeded at a pace set by
the community of Deline. Plans for historic site commemoration
and interpretation have been done in conjunction with the
provisions of the Sahtu Dene and Metis Comprehensive Land
Claim Agreement. With the claim in place and the necessary
background information collected, the community has sent a
proposal forward to the Historic Sites and Monuments Board
of Canada for consideration at its meeting in November 1996
in Ottawa.
Deline
At the request of the Chief and Council of the Deline
Dene Band, Tom Andrews, Prince of Wales Northern Heritage
Centre, undertook a week-long heritage resource impact assessment
of the proposed site of a new hotel in the community of Deline.
The proposed development, located across the road from the
site of Sir John Franklin's 1825-26 Winter Quarters, was considered
at risk because of its proximity to the Franklin site. With
assistance from Kirk Dolphus and Francis Yukon of the community,
a series of shovel test pits were excavated in the development
area. The test excavations revealed no significant heritage
resources.
Once the assessment was complete the team inspected the
archaeological site (LhRk-5) located on the opposite side
of the community. Here, housing development has threatened,
and partially destroyed six house foundations, which according
to community elders date from the late 19th and early 20th
centuries. The remains of an additional five house structures
were located bringing the total to eleven. This site, tentatively
called 'Old Deline', may provide important clues to the early
history of the community, and it was recommended that further
development be halted. Later we visited the abandoned cemetery.
The crew recorded the site of the abandoned cemetery, located
about 1.5 km northeast of the community on maps to ensure
that it too, will be protected from future development.
Tsiigehnjik Ethnoarchaeology Project
The Gwich'in Social and Cultural Institute conducted a
second season of excavations at MeTp-4, a traditional Gwich'in
campsite located at Martin Zheh (Martin House) on Tsiigehnjik
, the Arctic Red River, a major tributary of the Mackenzie
River. Situated at the mouth of an unnamed creek, the site
contains over two metres of silt deposits, visible as light
and dark bands in the river bank. Gwich'in tradition tells
us that this site was used seasonally during spring and fall
journeys between the Mackenzie River and the mountains to
the south. The site is important because it documents these
seasonal camps and provides some evidence of how Euro-Canadian
technologies were integrated into traditional Gwich'in life
ways over the last 200 years.
A Gwich'in crew, under the direction of Eric Damkjar (ERD
Heritage Consulting, Edmonton) completed excavation of a 3
by 7 metre block to a depth of one metre. Five cultural layers
were investigated, ranging in age from approximately the late
1700s to the early 1900s. Each contains animal bones and a
variety of artifacts concentrated around fire places which
show up as patches of white ash and charcoal. The earliest
layers contain traditional Gwich'in tools, such as bone arrow
heads, an antler fish hook, bone and antler fleshers for scraping
hides, and many flakes from stone tool manufacture. Along
with these, we have found an iron knife blade, pieces of sheet
copper, probably from a kettle, a copper snowshoe needle,
and a variety of glass beads. Above this, in the more recent
layers, we recovered different styles of glass beads, buttons,
cloth, square iron nails, sheet copper rolled into a tube,
part of a glass medicine bottle, lead shot and percussion
caps from muzzle-loading guns, and a rabbit snare made from
thin copper wire. Although bone and stone tool manufacture
continued, it appears to have been less significant than in
earlier years. Large amounts of birch bark, on the other hand,
show the lasting importance of this material.
The thousands of animal bones found with these artifacts
include muskrat, beaver, hare, caribou, ducks, geese, and
fish, chiefly jackfish (pike) and loche (burbot). We expect
analysis of these remains to tell us at what time of year
people camped here and to show whether the fur trade and changing
technology had an effect on people's hunting and fishing activities
at Martin House.
Although this was not a formal field school, an important
goal was to provide Gwich'in individuals with training and
hands-on experience in archaeology. The enthusiasm this project
generated among its ten crew members builds on the continuing
work of the Gwich'in Social and Cultural Institute. |