August 6, 2004
Digging for history
in Naujaat
"I wasn't expecting
the site to be so rich"
MOSHA FOLGER
Special to Nunatsiaq News
Many events bring together
different Inuit from across Nunavut every year.
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Jessica
Kotierk holding a whale bone unearthed at the site.
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Regional qualifiers for
the Arctic Winter Games; Bible conferences; spring festivals such as the Omingmak
Frolics in Cambridge Bay and the Nattiq Frolics in Kugluktuk, and Toonik Tyme
in Iqaluit.
People gather to share
their interests in snowmobile racing, faith, music, and arts. But one thing
that all these groups share, compelling them to come together, is a desire to
meet new people, and to share fun, memorable times with those new friends.
And so a group of Inuit
students, ranging from third-year university undergrads to Grade 10 high-schoolers,
have converged on the small community of Naujaat (Repulse Bay) to share, learn
and grow, brought together by the desire for new friendship, the need for new
exciting memories, and the common goal of getting elbow-deep in dirt to help
piece together the lifestyle of some of our 1,000-year-old ancestors.
Along with Erika Chemko
of Inuit Heritage Trust in Iqaluit, Sue Rowley of the University of British
Columbia in Vancouver and three of Rowley's UBC archaeology students, the 11
Nunavut students, from places as far apart as Ottawa and Kugluktuk, are working
together to gain a greater understanding of the way our Inuit ancestors survived
before contact with Europeans.
The community of Repulse
Bay was established just a few kilometres from a village first occupied by Inuit
at least 1,300 years ago.
The Naujaat site sits on
Naujan Lake, watched over by sheer cliffs that currently house a nesting pair
of peregrine falcons. Since July 9, those falcons, and the many siksiks and
lemmings that also call the area home have had some busy neighbors.
That's when the students
began their exploring, surveying, mapping, excavating and documenting of MdHs-1,
House 20.
MdHs-1 is the name given
to the Naujaat site under the Borden System, the official grid system used by
archaeologists to keep track of sites in Canada. House 20 is the label given
to the remains of the sod house by one of the first anthropologists, early twentieth
century Danish geologist Therkel Mathiassen, who, in 1922, began the first archaeological
investigation in Canada's Arctic, at what he called Naujan.
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Jessica
Kotierk, Lorna Kilukishak and Sarah Kudluarok (front to back) working to remove
the topsoil from House 20.
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The observations and findings
of Mathiassen's investigations, as part of the Fifth Thule Expedition, showed
that there was a demonstrably different Inuit culture prior to present-day Inuit
that relied much more heavily on whales for survival.
He named the people "Thule,"
after Thule, Greenland, where a related team, the Second Thule Expedition, found
the first evidence of the previous culture. And though Naujaat was the second
Thule site discovered, being the most extensively excavated, Naujaat became
the "type site," or standard example, of Thule Inuit culture.
Mathiassen partly excavated
12 of the 20 sod houses he was able to identify, and a refuse heap.
"We wanted to test
some of Mathiassen's observations of the site. He only recognized one culture
at the site, but we're fairly certain that the Dorset culture, which pre-dates
the Thule, used the site. We wanted to see if there were any Thule houses he
hadn't recorded, and we wanted to get some samples to run radiocarbon dating,
because, though the site is significant to Arctic archaeology, it has never
been radiocarbon dated," Rowley said.
On the first day of excavation
a tiny pair of goggles and tiny kayak paddle was uncovered. Obviously toys,
the two items soon had all the students imagining the life of a child in the
village 1,000 years ago, with a doll to put the goggles on, a kayak to put the
doll in, and a paddle to complete the ensemble.
The first Inuk Barbie designed
recently had a matching Inuk Ken made 1,000 years before!
In that house, the IHT
Archaeology Field School is learning not just about the life led by Inuit before
European contact, but also the lives led by present-day Inuit as different from
each other as Mathiassen's was from the life of a modern archaeologist.
Students from Ottawa and
Iqaluit see first-hand how strong Inuit traditions - such as speaking Inuktitut,
hunting, and eating frozen caribou and muktuk - are in Nunavut.
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Sue
Rowley explains part of the house to a Repulse Bay visitor.
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In contrast to many homes
in Iqaluit, narwhal blubber and frozen caribou are staple foods in many Repulse
Bay lunches, where they are referred to, of course, by their Inuktitut names:
muktuk and quaq.
All the students shared
a laugh as the two pronunciations for arctic ground squirrel (siksik and hikhik)
were added to by Jonathan Puqiqnak from Gjoa Haven. Apparently only he was aware
that in some parts of Nunavut, Gjoa Haven being one of them, the reddish-brown
rodent is known as a "hikshik."
Sarah Kudluarok, a high
school student who made six stops travelling from Sanikiluaq, through Quebec
and Ontario, to reach Repulse Bay, says despite the latitude and landscape differences
between her permanent and temporary homes, Sanikiluaq and Repulse Bay are quite
similar. Sanikiluaq also has a rich traditional lifestyle and Inuktitut is the
dominant language.
"They are both small
communities, with nothing open on Sundays. But the dialect is very different,"
Sarah said.
Through language and lifestyle
differences, the students are working as a group in a manner wholly different
from the initial archaeological investigation of the Naujaat village.
Mathiassen worked mostly
on his own, digging manually in the peat, sod and gravel of the area. He mapped
the surrounding land by hand using just a compass, and he travelled by ship
and dog team. The students who follow in his archaeological footsteps flew into
Repulse Bay on a plane, map the land using a GPS and modern surveying equipment,
and dig and screen with modern tools.
There are no archaeology-specific
tool makers, so archaeologists make do with close approximations of tools they
might themselves have invented: mason's trowels to scrape at layers of soil,
dustpans to catch the soil, mop buckets to hold the excavated earth, and crude
wooden boxes, nailed together with a screen stapled to the bottom, to separate
useful material such as bone chips and soapstone artifacts from the less useful
dirt surrounding them.
Adam Tragakis, a UBC archaeology
student entering his third year, is staying with the Northern store manager,
and received a warm welcome from the people of Repulse Bay.
"The people are very
friendly. They are shy at first, but they have a nice sense of humour,"
Tragakis said. He is also impressed by what is being unearthed at the Naujaat
site.
"I was surprised by
the amount of artifacts at the site, I wasn't expecting the site to be so rich,"
he said.
Besides finding artifacts
Tragakis has enjoyed the outside work, accustomed to it after four springs spent
planting trees in BC.
And so the team works meticulously,
keeping track of all they find, plotting it on electronic maps as well as with
pencil, paper and measuring tape, ensuring that future generations can appreciate
the first-hand knowledge the students are gaining by digging in the dirt.
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