
"This site is shaking up everything we thought we knew and could change the narrative of early Indigenous civilizations in North America," amateur archaeologist Dave Rondeau, who first identified the site in 2023, said in a Feb. 4 statement.
Evidence already recovered from Âsowanânihk, located in the Sturgeon Lake First Nation (SLFN) in central Saskatchewan, includes stone tools, firepits and bison bones, according to the statement. A very large firepit suggests that the site was used for a long period, or repeatedly for shorter periods, according to Glenn Stuart, an archaeologist at the University of Saskatchewan who is involved in the project. Such use indicates that the settlement was likely a long-term one, rather than a temporary hunting camp, where Indigenous hunters strategically harvested the extinct Bison antiquus.
Charcoal from one of the hearths was radiocarbon-dated to about 10,700 years ago, Stuart told Live Science in an email. This means that people were living in the village just after the last ice age ended, when there was finally land suitable for plants to grow.
"This indicates that people arrived in this location as soon as it was habitable," Stuart said, "and then continually reoccupied the site for thousands of years. Ancestral First Nations have been living in the area west of [the city of] Prince Albert for as long as it has been possible to live in the area."
"This discovery is a powerful reminder that our ancestors were here, building, thriving, and shaping the land long before history books acknowledged us," SLFN Chief Christine Longjohn said in the statement. "This site speaks for us, proving that our roots run deep and unbroken," she said.
The site of Âsowanânihk is currently being studied by archaeologists, including Stuart, alongside the SLFN's Âsowanânihk Council, which includes Elders, Knowledge Keepers and educators. The council is also working with local stakeholders to protect the site, which was originally identified because it was eroding out of a riverbank and now faces potential destruction from logging activities in the area.
Reader Comments
In the photo (and this one [Link] ), look at the layers of silt/clay below and above the charcoal which is supposed to represent the site. Lots of thin, grey silt layers below and around the charcoal represent 'flood stages' (drastic overlaying of silt), but the gray layer above the charcoal is relatively thick, which represents a tremendous amount of water-born deposition all at once.
Then at the very top you have darker coloured, organic deposits which began when vegetation sprang up, supposedly once the last glacial ice had retreated and things warmed up there. Most articles say that was between 7,000 and 10,000 years ago.
So if the dating of the charcoal is 11,000 years, and the organic layer at the very top began 1,000 to 4,000 years After the charcoal was laid down, then the really thick layer of silt between the two was laid down relatively quickly. Glacial melt outpouring? That would mean the 'settlement' was there before the big ice melt.
Genius pilot.
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More American gossip of Canada. Invasion of ...
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6 Year Canada Trail traveled by Canadian filmmaker.
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Patriotism before Chaos
[Link] Lao Tzu, Tao Te Ching
You're the hypocritical lying emprisoned leech, not because of a bad heart but a dumb mind. And then we lose the 2.
I spoke clearly back then YOU MF BULLY, as I do now. You're all jealous passive-aggressive POISONOUS peewee punks. :barf:🐉👹
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Canadian Flag on ICE in B.C.
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