ADD FAVORITES

 

BOOKMARK US




Login Form






Lost Password?
No account yet? Register

RSS FEEDS

Get our news delivered directly to your desktop-free

Who's Online

We have 6 guests online

USER STATISTICS

679 registered
0 today
0 this week
1 this month

Visitors Counter

Today2676
Yesterday5297
This week2676
This month96815
All4088997
Data since November 3, 2008
1689 Newsletter Subscribers

Announcement

Dear Visitors,

Archaeology Daily News is an Amazon Associates Program member.You can buy archaeology related books securely at our Amazon Bookstore by clicking the Bookstore menu item on the vertical menu in the left of our webpages (Link: Archaeolody Daily News Bookstore).

Archaeology Daily News earns revenues from Amazon book sales.

We will make donations to UNICEF (United Nations Children's Fund) for 50% of our Amazon earnings. We will publish our donations at Archaeology Daily News.

Thank you very much for your support!

Best Regards,

Archaeology Daily News



Human activity goes back some 8,000 years, digs at the St. Mungo showed E-mail
May, 01 2010
 

This page is viewed 1191 times

Surrey Now

In 1986, Expo '86 celebrated 100 years of Vancouver as a city. Fifteen years earlier, British Columbia marked 100 years as a province. Before that, Canada spent all of 1967 marking the nation's centenary.

Archaeologists dig at the St. Mungo site in the early 1980s. Some of the artifacts found at the Delta site date back 8,000 years.

Exciting and fun times but in truth, kind of short-sighted. How about a real milestone to celebrate? If it wasn't for a niggling detail like the absence of calendars at the start, the residents of North Delta could be marking more that 8,000 years of continual human activity on the southern banks of the Fraser River.

Drivers on River Road spend too much time nervously watching the encroaching semi in the rear-view mirror to contemplate what lies just north of the busy strip of asphalt. Beginning at the foot of the Alex Fraser Bridge and stretching roughly one kilometre eastward lies one of the most important archaeological sites in Western Canada.

"It's a very significant site," said Kathy Bossort of the Delta Museum and Archives. "Activity there goes way back, at least 8,000 years. The archaeological dig revealed some amazing things. It showed a change in use of resources and how the site was used. Apparently the use of the site did change over time, both the seasons it was occupied and the types of animals they were using."

To put that in perspective, Stonehenge in England was erected beginning 5,100 years ago. The pyramids in Egypt were constructed 4,500 years ago. But 3,000 years before that, indigenous people were scratching out a living on the banks of the Fraser in North Delta.

The age of the site is only part of its archaeological allure. Evidence gathered shows a gradual change in the lives of the people who accessed natural resources there.

Tools formed from bone and antler offer the earliest evidence of a hunting society in seasonal camps that lived off large game such as elk. As the centuries went by, that usage gradually changed, reflecting a similar change in the human society. The later evidence shows a society that was centred around harvesting salmon and other aquatic life at different times of the year.

When Europeans arrived in the 1800s, the salmon harvesting continued on an industrial scale. The historic St. Mungo and Glenrose canneries were erected on the site and operated there for almost a century.

In the 1970s, archaeologists undertook the first detailed study of the Glenrose cannery area and determined it was one of the oldest locations occupied by humans in the Lower Mainland.

A decade later, the St. Mungo cannery was torn down to make way for the Alex Fraser Bridge and a hurried archaeological dig was undertaken to excavate as much as possible before the concrete began to pour. The discoveries at that time were determined to be so important that the location of the bridge supports were moved to protect the archaeological site.



Add this page to your favorite Social Bookmarking websites
Reddit! Del.icio.us! JoomlaVote! Google! Live! Facebook! StumbleUpon! Yahoo! Free social bookmarking plugins and extensions for Joomla! websites!



Users' Comments  RSS feed comment
 

 

No comment posted

Add your comment



mXcomment 1.0.9 © 2007-2013 - visualclinic.fr
License Creative Commons - Some rights reserved
< Prev   Next >



Archaeology Daily News published 8523 news articles since November 3, 2008

Today's News

May 05, 2013 News 
 

MOST VIEWED NEWS



MOST EMAILED NEWS

MOST COMMENTED NEWS

© 2013 Archaeology Daily News