
1991 Field Report
(Part
5)
by
Jean-Luc Pilon
NOGAP Archaeologist
Canadian Museum of Civilization
Revisited Sites
Vidiitshuu (lac à Truite)
Field No: 85JLP-26
Borden No: MlTj-2
This site was revisited in order to determine if the presence
of the fire suppression camp had impacted the remains of the birch
bark canoe which was found there in 1985 (Pilon 1985:20-22). It
was with much relief that the remains of that craft were found to
be in the same state as when last seen in 1987.
Field No: 85JLP-19
Borden No: MlTk-1
This site was revisited during the course of the survey of the
east end of Vidiitshuu (lac à la Truite or Trout Lake). Since the
fire fighters' camp was unoccupied at that time, it offered a good
opportunity to assess the impact that the fire suppression camp had
had on this archaeological site identified in semi-subterranean structure
was discovered near a
portable outhouse located on the first terrace beside the beach
helicopter pad and fuel storage area. The structure is about 30
metres from the shore of the embayment and about 75 metres from the
point.
The feature consists of an oval depression measuring about 1.5
m x 1 m x 30 cm deep. A distinct ridge or berm was noted along all
sides of the depression. A test pit placed in the centre of the
depression suggests its recent use since pieces of polyethylene
were found under the sod.
A test pit placed on the west lateral berm revealed a humus
layer with a decomposing pole under 7-10 cm of fine sand which was
overlain by about 10 cm of sphagnum. The humus rested on a fine
sand of unknown depth. A second shovel test pit excavated into the
south end berm revealed a similar stratigraphy. Charcoal was found
in the buried humus along with pieces of decomposing wood.
Field No: 85JLP-38
Borden No: MlTk-2
A base camp was established at MlTk-2 on Vidiitshuu (lac à la
Truite or Trout Lake) on the 14th of June and a crew maintained
there for the entire course of the field season, although the size
of this crew varied primarily as a result of survey work. The site was discovered in 1985 and investigations were conducted there during the 1986 and 1987 field seasons.A
detailed discussion of the 1991 excavations undertaken and
supervised by Luc Nolin, research assistant with the NOGAP
Archaeology Project can be found in Nolin (1992).
Only a summary will be presented here.
- Edge Test Unit
This area was initially tested in 1987 when a total of 13
square metres were excavated (Pilon 1988:77-79). At that time the
base of a lanceolate projectile point was found in apparent
association with artifacts suggestive of the manufacture of linear
debitage. The few microblade-like fragments and a possible core
rejuvination flake seemed reminiscent of the microblade technology
documented at NbTj-3 on Hyndman Lake (Nolin 1991:30-52; Pilon
1989:57-76). The 1991 excavations there were thus intended to
verify this association and hopefully obtain further materials
relating to this as yet poorly defined technology.
This year's work in the Edge Test Unit resulted in the further
excavation of a total of 23.5 square metres on either side of the
original 1987 excavations. Within these areas a number of distinct
combustion zones or hearth areas were identified. Some of these
features were so described on the basis of soil reddening, but the
added presence of faunal remains and/or fire-cracked rocks was
judged necessary for attributing function to the stained sand.
Quite simply, the thinness of the soils and the recurrence of
forest fires in this kind of environment can result in reddened
sands without human intervention. Lithic scatters were often found
in close proximity to or surrounding these features.
Although large amounts of lithic debitage were recovered from
these excavations, implements or fragments thereof were quite few.
The predominant lithic types used were siliceous argillite with
lesser quantities of coarse-grained white quartzite. Cherts were
relatively infrequent and restricted to the eastern part of the
excavation area where a small quantity of chert debitage and at
least one implement were found.
At present it is difficult if not impossible to establish the
relationship between the various hearth areas with any degree of
certainty. Rather, it seems more likely that these excavations
have exposed the intensity to which the terrace edge area has been
utilized over the course of centuries.
Within the 1987 excavations, the lanceolate point base,
microblade-related debitage and debitage from chipping of a
coarse-grained raw material were found in proximity to a large
cumbustion zone. Neither of these three artifacts were found in
the adjacent areas exposed in 1991. This suggests that the
association between these three elements may be due to more than
chance circumstances alone.
- East Point
The initial discovery and testing of MlTk-2 concentrated on
the central portion of this point. At the very tip of the point,
the only evidence of past human activity had been the discovery of
what was thought to be some kind of a recent cache (Pilon 1985:28).
It has since be determined that this underground cache was intended
to be a fish storage facility to be used in a commercial fishery
(Willie Simon Modeste, personal communication 1988). Repeated
random surveys during subsequent stays at this point failed to
reveal additional evidence. However, at the instigation of Luc
Nolin, NOGAP Archaeology Project research assistant, intensive
testing of the tip of the point was undertaken and resulted in a
number of positive test pits.
Excavations took place so as to encompass two of the positive
areas identified during the testing. One area (Area B) of five
square metres was located at the very tip of the point, just north
of the recent fish cache and the other (Area A-8 square metres)
along the north side of the point, approximately 7 metres from the
first.
Within Area B, an Arctic Small Tool tradition component was
discovered, in proximity to a possible hearth feature. The
inventory of implements includes burins,
burin spalls, finely
flaked projectile points, microblades, scrapers, pièces
esquillées and a possible adze blade.
Both calcined and
non-thermally altered faunal remains were also recovered.
Within Area A, the base of a lanceolate
projectile point
exhibiting basal lateral grinding and parallel, oblique flaking was
found along with a slightly concave-based, triangular to pentagonal
point of vesicular clinker visually identical to the clinker found
in Palaeoeskimo sites of the Old Horton Channel on Cape Bathurst
Peninsula (LeBlanc 1991:268-277). Another artifact recovered in
addition to lithic debitage, was the base of a stemmed point or
knife fragment which is likely associated with the ASTt component
a few metres away.
Materials from this portion of MlTk-2, along with information
gathered from three others in the southwest Anderson Plain (NbTj-8,
NbTj-9 and NbTj-17), provided the basis for an
analysis of the Arctic Small Tool tradition
in the region.
- West Point
Following the success at the East Point, testing was continued
along the north side of the point to its base. This worked failed
to discover any evidence of use other than the known
semi-subterranean features located there in 1986 (Pilon
1987:11-22). However, at the base or west end of the point, a
square depression measuring approximately 1.5 m x 1.5 m x 20 cm had
been noted along with fire-cracked rock protruding from the thin
moss and lichen vegetation. Excavations were undertaken in this
area with the intention of determining the nature of the
depression.
A total of 16.5 square metres were excavated. At least two
separate hearth areas were documented. In
association with these
features were copious quantities of lithic debitage, fire-cracked
rock and faunal remains.
The nature of
the depression remains, however, enigmatic. The
depression had quite vertical walls and was filled with over 1
metre of humus which contained only a few pebbles. The feature
appears to truncate a distribution of material associated with a
nearby hearth, but other than a few items in the top 10 cm of the
fill, no artifacts were found within the humus.
A similar but much smaller humus-filled depression was also
found at the western extremity of the excavated area.
- Excavations near Structure No.2
Excavation of portions of Structure No.2 had taken place in 1987. Following a fairly intensive testing of the area between
Structure No.2 and the break in slope leading down to the shore of
Vidiitshuu, two areas were selected form more intensive
investigation.
In one area, located less than 3 metres from the southwest
corner of the semi-subterranean feature, two separate clusters of
fire-cracked rocks were found.
One of the clusters appears to represent the disposal of
disaggregated boiling stones by
occupants of the semi-subterranean
dwelling. It is comprised of a fan-like distribution of
fire-cracked rocks, a thin veneer of disaggregated metamorphic rock
(smaller pieces of fire-cracked rock) and a small collection of
siliceous argillite debitage.
The second
concentration appears to document the process
involved in the manufacture of stone adzes. A cluster of large
heat spalled cobble and boulder fragments was surrounded by a
scatter of smaller fragments of the same coarse-grained metamorphic
stone, some of which were flakes produced by percussion.
Finally, a chipped and distally ground
adze was found between
the two clusters. A note of caution is sounded by the recovery, in
the adze manufacturing area, or 2 microblades and a microblade core
rejunivation flake. These items obviously do not relate to the
late prehistoric semi-subterranean structure to which the
adze
manufacturing and fire-cracked rock disposal area are presumed to
belong. The bases for any such associations are circumstantial.
The second major
testing took place immediately east of the
east end of the semi-subterrannean structure. There, a hearth
feature was located around which some lithic debitage of both
fine-grained materials and coarser metamorphic stone was found.
Implements were few but included a chipped adze, a biface preform
and possible chert microblade core fragment. Again, this last item
suggests caution in attributing materials found outside the
semi-subterranean structure with the occupation of that feature.