Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-s2hrs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-09T13:01:55.138Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Importance of Minimally Invasive Remote Sensing Methods in Huron-Wendat Archaeology

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 May 2021

Gary Warrick*
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology and Heritage Studies, Wilfrid Laurier University, 75 University Avenue West, Waterloo, Ontario, N2L 3C5, Canada ([email protected])
Bonnie Glencross
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology and Heritage Studies, Wilfrid Laurier University, 75 University Avenue West, Waterloo, Ontario, N2L 3C5, Canada ([email protected])
Louis Lesage
Affiliation:
Bureau du Nionwentsïo, Nation huronne-wendat, 255, Place Chef Michel-Laveau, Wendake, Quebec, G0A 4V0, Canada ([email protected])
*
([email protected], corresponding author)

Abstract

The Huron-Wendat have had their ancestors’ villages and burial sites investigated archaeologically for over 170 years. Past and ongoing land disturbance and invasive archaeological excavation have erased dozens of Huron-Wendat village sites in Ontario, hindering Huron-Wendat duty to care for their ancestors. Consequently, over the last 20 years, in addition to large-scale repatriation of ancestral remains, the Huron-Wendat have requested that archaeologists make every effort to avoid any further excavation of ancestral sites. This poses a new challenge for archaeologists about how to learn about the Huron-Wendat past with minimal disturbance to ancestral sites. Honoring the cultural responsibilities of the Huron-Wendat, the authors have employed minimally invasive remote sensing methods of investigation on Ahatsistari, a forested early seventeenth-century Huron-Wendat village site in Simcoe County, Ontario. Remote sensing methods (e.g., magnetic susceptibility survey, high-resolution soil chemistry sampling, and metal detector survey) have revealed village limits and the possible location and orientation of longhouses, providing essential information in support of the Huron-Wendat imperative to find, assess, and preserve as many of their archaeological sites as possible. This is to protect the ancestors, learn from the ancestors, and preserve ancestral sites and related landscapes for future generations.

Les Hurons-Wendat ont vu les villages et les lieux de sépulture de leurs ancêtres fouillés archéologiquement depuis plus de 170 ans. Les perturbations passées et actuelles des sols et les fouilles archéologiques invasives ont effacé des dizaines de sites du village huron-wendat en Ontario, entravant ainsi le devoir des Hurons-Wendat de prendre soin de leurs ancêtres. Par conséquent, au cours des 20 dernières années, en plus du rapatriement à grande échelle et de la réinhumation des vestiges ancestraux, les Hurons-Wendat ont demandé aux archéologues de tout mettre en œuvre pour éviter toute nouvelle fouille de leurs sites ancestraux. Cela pose un nouveau défi pour les archéologues sur la façon d'en apprendre davantage sur le passé des Hurons-Wendat en fonction d'un minimum de perturbations sur les sites ancestraux. Honorant les responsabilités culturelles des Hurons-Wendat, les auteurs ont utilisé des méthodes d'enquête de télédétection minimalement invasives du site Ahatsistari, un village de Huron-Wendat situé au début du XVIIe siècle dans le comté de Simcoe, en Ontario. Les méthodes de télédétection (ex., susceptibilité magnétique, échantillonnage de la chimie des sols à haute résolution et relevé avec détecteurs de métaux) ont révélé les limites du village, l'emplacement et l'orientation possibles des maisons longues, fournissant ainsi des informations essentielles à l'appui de l'impératif huron-wendat de trouver, d’évaluer et de préserver le plus grand nombre possible de leurs sites archéologiques, afin de protéger leurs ancêtres, d'apprendre de ceux-ci, et de préserver les sites ancestraux et les paysages connexes pour les générations futures.

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Society for American Archaeology

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES CITED

Archaeological Services Inc. (ASI) 2020 Yändata’: The Huron-Wendat Begin a New Partnership with ASI. Electronic document, https://asiheritage.ca/asi-media/yandata-the-huron-wendat-begin-a-new-partnership-with-asi/, accessed October 15, 2020.Google Scholar
Birch, Jennifer 2012 Coalescent Communities: Settlement Aggregation and Social Integration in Iroquoian Ontario. American Antiquity 77:646670.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Birch, Jennifer 2016 Interpreting Iroquoian Site Structure through Geophysical Prospection and Soil Chemistry: Insights from a Coalescent Community in Ontario, Canada. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 8:102111.Google Scholar
Birch, Jennifer, and Williamson, Ronald F. 2013 The Mantle Site: An Archaeological History of an Ancestral Wendat Community. AltaMira Press, Lanham, Maryland.Google Scholar
Birch, Jennifer, and Williamson, Ronald F. 2015 Navigating Landscapes in the Northern Iroquoian World. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 39:139150.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Canadian Archaeological Association 2018 Statement on UNDRIP and TRC Calls to Action. Electronic document, https://canadianarchaeology.com/caa/about/ethics/statement-undrip-and-trc-calls-action, accessed October 15, 2020.Google Scholar
Coleman, Derek, and Williamson, Ronald F. 1994 Landscapes Past to Landscapes Future: Planning for Archaeological Resources. In Great Lakes Archaeology and Paleoecology: Exploring Interdisciplinary Initiatives for the Nineties, edited by MacDonald, Robert, pp. 6180. Quaternary Sciences Institute, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.Google Scholar
Colwell, Chip 2016 Collaborative Archaeologies and Descendant Communities. Annual Review of Anthropology 45:113127.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Conger, Megan Anne, and Birch, Jennifer 2019 Archaeological Reconnaissance through Multi-Method Geophysical and Geochemical Survey at Two Iroquoian Village Sites, Southern Ontario, Canada. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 26:101888. DOI:10.1016/j.jasrep.2019.101888.Google Scholar
Connor, Melissa, and Scott, Douglas D. 1998 Metal Detector Use in Archaeology: An Introduction. Historical Archaeology 32(4):7685.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Conseil de la Nation huronne-wendat 2015 Position of the Huron-Wendat Nation Regarding the Archaeological and Cultural Heritage of the Ancestral Lands Located in Ontario. Taken from the Minutes Binder of the Conseil de la Nation huronne-wendat, Canada, Village des Hurons, Wendake – Copy of Resolution Number 6598, June 15, 2015.Google Scholar
Creese, John 2012 The Domestication of Personhood: A View from the Northern Iroquoian Longhouse. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 22:365386.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ferris, Neal, and Welch, John R. 2014 Beyond Archaeological Agendas: In the Service of a Sustainable Archaeology. In Transforming Archaeology: Activist Practices and Prospects, edited by Atalay, Sonya, Claus, Lee Rains, McGuire, Randall H., and Welch, John R., pp. 215238. Left Coast Press, Walnut Creek, California.Google Scholar
Fletcher, Beatrice, Glencross, Bonnie, Warrick, Gary, and Reinhardt, Eduard 2019 Minimally Invasive Soil Chemistry and Settlement Pattern Investigation at a 17th Century Huron-Wendat Village. Paper presented at the 52nd Annual Meeting of the Canadian Archaeological Association, Quebec City, Quebec.Google Scholar
Glencross, Bonnie 2016 Report on the Archaeological Field School at Ahatsistari (formerly Allen Tract BeGx-76), Lot 45 Military Reserve, Town of Penetanguishene, Simcoe County, Ontario. Under Licence P-377-0001-2014 (Stage 3). Report submitted to the Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Sport, Government of Ontario, Toronto.Google Scholar
Glencross, Bonnie 2018 Report on the 2016 Wilfrid Laurier University Field School at Ahatsistari (BeGx-76), Lot 45 Military Reserve, Town of Penetanguishene, Simcoe County, Ontario. Under Licence P-377-0002-2016 (Stage 3). Report submitted to the Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Sport, Government of Ontario, Toronto.Google Scholar
Glencross, Bonnie, Warrick, Gary, Hawkins, Alicia, Eastaugh, Edward, Hodgetts, Lisa, and Lesage, Louis 2017 Minimally Invasive Research Strategies in Huron-Wendat Archaeology: Working toward an Indigenous and Sustainable Archaeology. Advances in Archaeological Practice 5:147158.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Griffith, M. A. 1980 A Pedological Investigation of an Archaeological Site in Ontario, Canada, I: An Examination of the Soils in and adjacent to a Former Village. Geoderma 24:327336.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Griffith, M. A. 1981 A Pedological Investigation of an Archaeological Site in Ontario, Canada, II: Use of Chemical Data to Discriminate Features of the Benson Site. Geoderma 25:2734.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hamilton, Michelle A. 2010 Collections and Objections: Aboriginal Material Culture in Southern Ontario, 1791–1914. McGill-Queen's University Press, Montreal and Kingston.Google Scholar
Hawkins, Alicia 2007 Report on the Investigations at BeGx-25 (Ossossané Village and Ossossané A), Lot 16, Concession 7, Tiny Township, Simcoe County, Ontario Under Licence P081 – 006–2006. Report submitted to the Ministry of Culture, Ontario.Google Scholar
Hawkins, Alicia 2014 Report on the Public Archaeology and the Field School at the Allen Tract (BeGx-76), Lot 45 Military Reserve, Town of Penetanguishene, Simcoe County, Ontario. Under Licence P-081-012-2012 (Stage 4) and P-081-14-2013 (Stage 2). Report submitted to the Ministry of Tourism, Culture, and Sport, Government of Ontario, Toronto.Google Scholar
Hawkins, Alicia 2015 Report on the Public Archaeology at the Allen Tract (BeGx-76), Lot 45 Military Reserve, Town of Penetanguishene, Simcoe County, Ontario. Under Licence P-081-0017-2013 (Public Archaeology). Report submitted to the Ontario Ministry of Tourism, Culture, and Sport, Government of Ontario, Toronto.Google Scholar
Hawkins, Alicia, and Lesage, Louis 2018 Huron-Wendat Archaeological Heritage: Building Relationships towards Collaboration. História: Questões & Debates 66(2):111138.Google Scholar
Hawkins, Alicia, and Raynor, John 2012 Local Custodians: The Role of Avocational Archaeologists in the Protection of Wendat Heritage in Ontario. In Wendat and Wyandot Then and Now: Eonywa'ndiyonhratehkwih chia'ekwäa'tatehkwih – Proceedings of the First Wendat and Wyandot Studies Conference, Wendake, Québec, June 13th to 16th, 2012, edited by Dorais, Louis-Jacques and Lainey, Jonathan, pp. 99124. Les éditions Hannenorak, Wendake, Québec.Google Scholar
Heidenreich, Conrad E., and Konrad, Victor A. 1973 Soil Analysis at the Robitaille Site Part II: A Method Useful in Determining the Location of Longhouse Patterns. Ontario Archaeology 20:3362.Google Scholar
Heidenreich, Conrad E., and Navratil, S. 1973 Soil Analysis at the Robitaille Site Part I: Determining the Perimeter of the Village. Ontario Archaeology 20:2532.Google Scholar
Hodgetts, Lisa, Millaire, Jean-Francois, Eastaugh, Edward, and Chapdelaine, Claude 2016 The Untapped Potential of Magnetic Survey in the Identification of Precontact Archaeological Sites in Wooded Areas. Advances in Archaeological Practice 4:4154.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hunter, Andrew F. 1888 Villages and Ossuaries. In Annual Report of the Canadian Institute, Session 1886–87, Being Part of Appendix to the Report of the Minister of Education, Ontario, 1887. Warwick & Sons, Toronto.Google Scholar
Jackson, Hannah 2018 Archaeological Study at Allandale Station Taking Longer than Planned: City. Global News, November 21. https://globalnews.ca/news/4685507/archaeological-study-at-allandale-station-taking-longer-than-planned-city/, accessed October 18, 2020.Google Scholar
Jackson, Kenneth 2016 Huron-Wendat Call for Immediate Investigation after APTN Uncovers Ontario Desecrated Burial Site in Barrie. APTN National News, March 11. http://aptnnews.ca/2016/03/11/huron-wendat-call-for-immediate-investigation-after-aptn-uncovers-ontario-desecrated-burial-site-in-barrie/, accessed October 18, 2020.Google Scholar
Kapches, Mima 1993 The Identification of an Iroquoian Unit of Measurement: Architectural and Social/Cultural Implications for the Longhouse. Archaeology of Eastern North America 21:137162.Google Scholar
Kapches, Mima 2010 Ossossané Ossuary: The Circle Closes. Archaeology of Eastern North America 38:115.Google Scholar
Kellogg, Daniel 2014 The Ground beneath Their Feet: The Results of Three Magnetometry Surveys on Late Woodland Archaeological Sites in Vaughan, Ontario. Paper presented at the 47th Annual Meeting of the Canadian Archaeological Association, London, Ontario.Google Scholar
Knight, Dean 1987 Settlement Patterns at the Ball Site: A Seventeenth Century Huron Village. Archaeology of Eastern North America 15:177188.Google Scholar
Knight, Dean, and Melbye, Jerry 1983 Burial Patterns at the Ball Site. Ontario Archaeology 40:3748.Google Scholar
Lennox, Paul A. 2000 The Molson Site: An Early Seventeenth Century, First Nations Settlement, Simcoe County, Ontario. Bulletin 18. London Museum of Archaeology, London, Ontario.Google Scholar
Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing (Ontario) 2009 Municipal-Aboriginal Relationships: Case Studies. Electronic document, http://www.mah.gov.on.ca/AssetFactory.aspx?did=6775, accessed October 21, 2020.Google Scholar
Ministry of Tourism and Culture (Ontario) 2011 Standards and Guidelines for Consultant Archaeologists. Queen's Printer for Ontario, Toronto.Google Scholar
Nionwentsïo Office, Nation huronne-wendat 2020 Wendake South (Ontario). Electronic document, https://wendake.ca/cnhw/bureau-du-nionwentsio/wendake-sud-ontario/, accessed October 20, 2020.Google Scholar
Ontario Archaeological Society 2017 From Truth to Reconciliation. Electronic document, https://www.ontarioarchaeology.org/TRC, accessed October 15, 2020.Google Scholar
Pfeiffer, Susan, and Lesage, Louis 2014 The Repatriation of Wendat Ancestors / Le rapatriement des ancêtres Wendat. Canadian Journal of Archaeology 38:512.Google Scholar
Ramsden, Peter 2016 Becoming Wendat: Negotiating a New Identity around Balsam Lake in the Late Sixteenth Century. Ontario Archaeology 96:121132.Google Scholar
Trigger, Bruce 1967 Settlement Archaeology—Its Goals and Promise. American Antiquity 32:149-160.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada 2015 Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada: Calls to Action. Electronic document, http://trc.ca/assets/pdf/Calls_to_Action_English2.pdf, accessed February 22, 2021.Google Scholar
United Nations General Assembly 2007 United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. Electronic document, https://www.un.org/development/desa/indigenouspeoples/wp-content/uploads/sites/19/2018/11/UNDRIP_E_web.pdf, accessed February 22, 2021.Google Scholar
Warrick, Gary 1983 Reconstructing Ontario Iroquoian Village Organization. National Museum of Man Mercury Series, Archaeological Survey of Canada Paper No. 124:1–180. National Museums of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Warrick, Gary 2008 A Population History of the Huron-Petun, A.D. 500–1650. Cambridge University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Warrick, Gary 2017 Control of Indigenous Archaeological Heritage in Ontario, Canada. Archaeologies 13:88109.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Warrick, Gary 2018 Collaboration avec les Hurons-Wendat pour la protection du patrimoine archéologique en Ontario. Recherches Amérindiennes au Québec 48(3):4556.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williamson, Ronald F. 1979 Preliminary Report on Human Interment Patterns of the Draper Site. Canadian Journal of Archaeology 2:117121.Google Scholar
Williamson, Ronald F. 2007 “Otinontsiskiaj ondaon” (“The House of Cut-Off Heads”). In The Taking and Displaying of Human Body Parts as Trophies by Amerindians, edited by Chacon, Richard J. and Dye, David H., pp. 190221. Springer, Boston.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williamson, Ronald F. 2010 Planning for Ontario's Archaeological Past: Accomplishments and Continuing Challenges. Revista de Arqueología Americana 28:745.Google Scholar
Williamson, Ronald F. 2014 The Archaeological History of the Wendat to A.D. 1651: An Overview. Ontario Archaeology 94:364.Google Scholar
Williamson, Ronald F., and Steiss, Debbie A. 2003 A History of Ontario Iroquoian Multiple Burial Practice. In Bones of the Ancestors: The Archaeology and Osteobiography of the Moatfield Ossuary, edited by Williamson, Ronald F. and Pfeiffer, Susan, pp. 89132. Mercury Series Archaeology Paper 163. Canadian Museum of Civilization, Ottawa, Ontario.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wright, Milton J. 1981 The Walker Site. National Museum of Man Mercury Series, Archaeological Survey of Canada Paper No. 103:1–210. National Museums of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario.Google Scholar
Wrong, George M. (editor) 1939 The Long Journey to the Country of the Hurons. Champlain Society, Toronto.Google Scholar