
Other ASTt Sites in the Beaufort-Amundsen Region
A brief survey of other ASTt sites in the greater
Beaufort Sea-Amundsen Gulf Region will now be undertaken. This overview
will proceed from east to west along the Beaufort Sea coastal area and
continue east to the Coppermine region. This will be followed by
consideration of sites within the interior areas south of the
Beaufort-Amundsen Region.
Sites of a similar age and cultural affiliation
as the ASTt components of the southwest Anderson Plain are not numerous
in the western Canadian Arctic. Early ASTt remains have been described
from the Engigstciak site, NiVk-1, (MacNeish 1956) and Trout Lake
(Gordon 1970) in Yukon. Recent studies of the collections from both
these localities (Clark 1976; Greer 1991; see also Cinq-Mars et al.
1991) have outlined the severe provenance problems which existed at
these sites; difficulties not always apparent to the original
excavators. Enough questions exist surrounding associations and
assemblage integrities so that beyond noting the presence of "fossils
indicateurs", no more can be said, at this point, concerning the ASTt
tool kits at these sites. Comparisons are thus severely limited.
At the Engigstciak site (NiKv-1) located near the
mouth of the Firth River in the North Yukon coastal plain, the New
Mountain Phase (MacNeish 1956) of the Arctic Small Tool tradition
contained a number of bipointed projectiles. Some exhibit extremely
fine edge serration and oblique, parallel flaking, while others are much
less finely manufactured, yet they share the same general outline.
Quite obvious ASTt- style of "mitten-shaped" burins also fill many
specimen boxes in this collection. While the present author did not
systematically examine these, some burins did exhibit the burin thinning
described for most of the Anderson Plain specimens. However, the
relative importance of this feature is unknown. Further, there is a
strong possibility that the Engigstciak collection contains later, non-
Denbigh, ASTt materials. A recently obtained AMS date from an ASTt
context at this site yielded a date of 4280±200 (RIDDL-320) (Vogel et
al. 1991: 149). An earlier date of 1250 B.C.±56 (Rainey and Ralph 1959:
371) suggests a broad span for the ASTt presence at this site.
The Trout Lake sites of the north Yukon coastal
plain (Gordon 1970) have far fewer specimens easily attributable to the
Denbigh-related ASTt. Nonetheless, Greer (1991) has demonstrated the
presence of a number of western-oriented (i.e. Alaskan-derived) cultural
entities including Denbigh, Norton and Choris.
A small number of possible Arctic Small Tool
tradition artifacts were recovered by McGhee (1969) from Atkinson Point
(NlTk-5). Unfortunately, this site has since been completely destroyed
by erosion. Further, its small collection lacks implements which would
allow a specific cultural attibution within the tradition. Of note,
however, is the presence of the extremity of a finely-crafted projectile
point. It shows a highly controlled pattern of oblique, parallel,
collateral flake removal. It could relate to a Denbigh or a later ASTt
occupation.
More recently an early ASTt site (ObRw-11) was
tested on the former banks of the Old Horton River (Le Blanc 1991a), 240
km N-NE of Hyndman Lake. The assemblage included unground burins,
microblades and microblade cores, as well as finely serrated end-
blades, one of which appears to be a bipointed variety (Le Blanc 1991a:
Figure 11-h). Le Blanc posits that this collection "may be a link in
the delicate thread of Independence I migration to the High Arctic at
ca. 2000 B.C."(ibid.: 73).
During the 1992 field season K. Swayze found
chipped mitten-shaped burins at two inland lake fishing sites in the
interior of the Tuktoyaktuk Peninsula (Swayze 1993). While his prime
objective was to sample late prehistoric/historic Inuvialuit middens
associated with fish camps, the presence of what are clearly Denbigh
burins in the basal layers of these middens shows that these localities
were visited during much earlier times by members of the Arctic Small
Tool tradition.
Further afield, ASTt remains have been identified
in the lower Coppermine River region, notably at Dismal Lake (Harp 1958)
and at Bloody Falls (McGhee 1970).
The site at Bloody Falls is particularly
important since it is radiocarbon dated to 3300±90 B.P.(McGhee 1970:
58). In terms of comparisons with the Anderson Plain ASTt sites, the
Bloody Falls projectile points are dominated by concave-based,
lanceolate forms. The burins are comprised of both unifacial and
bifacially prepared specimens. Although flake scars emanating from the
burin facet are present, the great majority of the burin bits are either
unmodified, or have received facial grinding in an apparent effort to
modify the thickness of the bit. The use of grinding as a thinning and
even a shaping technique is found in other lithic tool categories as
well, and a number of basalt and metamorphic rock flakes (58) retain
grinding on their dorsal surfaces.
McGhee (1970) pointed out some of the marked
differences between the Bloody Falls ASTt collection and that found at
the undated Dismal-2, a site whose occupation McGhee estimated to be
several centuries earlier than the ASTt occupation at Bloody Falls.
At Dismal-2, projectile points are comprised of
fragments which suggest bipointed varieties. Moreover, many of these
exhibit fine edge serration and parallel, oblique, collateral flaking.
The burins, like those from Bloody Falls, are made on either unifacially
or bifacially prepared blanks, and are often thick. No grinding is
apparent on any of the burins, or any of the other implements. Further,
thinning of the burin bit faces by chipping is not a characteristic
feature of these burins. Where noted, it appeared to be use-related
rather than intentional.
Arctic Small Tool tradition sites have also been
discovered in the interior of the District of Mackenzie, most notably
between Great Bear Lake and Great Slave Lake (Noble 1971), to the north
of the Great Bear Lake and in the vicinity of Colville Lake (Clark
1987), and further east throughout the District of Keewatin (Gordon
1975).
Most of the ASTt artifacts described by both
Noble and Clark were collected from surface contexts, which in many
instance contained artifacts attributable to other cultural traditions.
This potential for assemblage mixing, as well as the total lack of
radiometric assays, prevented Clark from attempting to periodize the
ASTt occupations north of Great Bear Lake. However, Noble proposed four
distinct, yet clearly related phases to his Canadian Tundra Tradition.
Throughout the time spanned by Noble's so-called
"Canadian Tundra Tradition", the dominant projectile point is the small,
straight or concave- based triangular form. The polishing of burins is
another trait which persists throughout the Canadian Tundra Tradition.
Grinding and polishing is also a technique applied to other artifact
categories such as adzes. Microblades are apparently rare in the early
phases and more numerous in the later phases. Like the sites of the
Canadian Tundra Tradition, predominant point styles to the north of
Great Bear Lake are similarly small, straight or concave-based
triangular varieties. Burins often exhibit facial grinding and other
ground tool categories were recovered (Clark 1987:129). Microblades are
generally not numerous.
Clark estimates the ASTt presence in the area to
begin about 1500 B.C. based on the dating of events in the District of
Keewatin. Indeed, strong parallels are suggested with the Keewatin
Pre-Dorset occupation and generally, the ASTt presence in the Great Bear
region is seen as part of that same phenomenon (Gordon 1975:175).