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Archaeology Resources

As part of an ongoing effort to share Cultural Heritage knowledge...

The TRCA plans to make publicly available documents and non-sensitive project information to the general public. Check back for updates!

Summaries of Past Excavation Projects

Seed Barker: 16th century Iroquoian village on the Humber River/Carrying Place Trail -- home to our educational field schools for 25 years

Tegis Site: Aboriginal campsite occupied about 8,000 years ago near the Humber River in what is now the Claireville Conservation Area, south-east Brampton

Iax Site: located near the Duffins Marsh in south Ajax, this site demonstrates Aboriginal people's hunting and fishing activities in this area during the Early Woodland period, typically when people were living in larger inland villages but visiting the lakeshores to gather food and resources

Esox Site: Aboriginal campsite pockets spread over several acres as preContact Aboriginal peoples repeatedly visited the Lake St.George/Lake Wilcox kettle lakes "preContact grocery store" area over the milennia as early as 10,000 years ago!

Second Stong House: the Second Stong House archaeological site is located at Black Creek Pioneer Village, along side of the house that still stands in its original location. This small excavation gives us a peek into the lives of the first pioneer family who farmed this property long before the Conservation Authority began its relocation program to save other 19th century buildings and relocate them to what was once Daniel Stong's farm.

Seed Barker AkGv-1:Seed-Barker site:The Seed-Barker site (AkGv-1) is a Late Iroquoian, pre-European contact (16th century) village located in the City of Vaughan on the east bank of the East Humber River on property owned by TRCA.

Since 1983, the Seed-Barker site has served as a classroom for archaeological field schools including: the Boyd Field School, the York University-TRCA Field School, the Trent University Field School and the Ontario Archaeological Society Field School. During this period, more than 1,000 students have successfully completed the programs. Participants have excavated more than 2,600 sq. m of the site revealing seven complete longhouses, elements of 13 other structures, and have located approximately one million artifacts.

Of the 11,000 culturally or functionally diagnostic artifacts that have been catalogued and curated at the Royal Ontario Museum, a significant number suggest a Late Iroquoian (c. AD 1530-1560) habitation of the site. Analyses strongly suggest that Seed-Barker is directly ancestral to Sidey-Mackay and consequently is critical to the formation of the Petun in the Collingwood area.

Aside from Seed-Barker's inherent archaeological value, the manner in which the site has been carefully excavated provides a unique opportunity for innovative and thorough research. It is one of the very few sites excavated entirely by hand. The goals of the educational programs are to instruct students in proper excavation techniques with attention given to absolute artifact recovery, spatial control and precise data recording. Education and quality of information are the primary concerns, not volume of information.

 

Tegis Site:The Tegis site (AkGv-118) was first identified in 1991 during an archaeological survey of the Ontario Ministry of Transportation's proposed Highway 407 right-of-way on land owned by TRCA. Archaeological excavation of the site was conducted by TRCA during September of 1991 and June - July of 1992 to mitigate the resource prior to construction.

The Tegis site (AkGv-118) is a single component, late summer/early fall hunting and hide processing encampment situated on the west bank of the West Humber River. The site was likely occupied for a short duration by two family groups residing in two shelters.

The Tegis site tool kit included 871 artifacts. While these artifacts are similar in many respects to most Archaic assemblages, the collection does exhibit cultural continuity with earlier PalaeoIndian period. Use-wear analysis of several proposed wood working tools and the identification of their use on bitternut hickory and jack pine likewise supports an Early Archaic temporal association.

Although several lines of evidence point to a later Early Archaic cultural affiliation (ca. 6500 to 6000 B.C.) for the Tegis site, at this time this association is equivocal. The Tegis site represents a previously undefined assemblage and associated diagnostic projectile point which serves to identify a new cultural component for the Archaic in southern Ontario.

Iax Site:In 1997, the Town of Ajax requested an easement through TRCA land south of Bayly Road and west of Westney Road along the Duffins Creek in order to construct a sanitary sewer. Prior to construction, an archaeological investigation conducted by TRCA's Archaeological Unit located several archaeological sites including the Iax site (AkGs-19).

The Iax site (AkGs-19) is interpreted as a single component spring-summer transient camp. Although the site has not been completely excavated, the artifact distribution suggests a brief occupation by a single family, perhaps living in a temporary structure or tent. The placement of the site is strategic as to allow the inhabitants opportunities to gather and exploit seasonally available resources. If the faunal material reported above is reflective of the game processed at the site, an argument can be made to suggest that mammals, which could not be identified, may have been the preferred source of fauna-based protein.

The Iax toolkit includes 2,623 artifacts and is well represented by bifacial and unifacial tools. This suggests that the complete sequence of game processing (skinning, quartering and butchering) was conducted at the site. Several diagnostic artifacts were recovered at the Iax site. In general, this projectile point assemblage appears very similar to that reported for the Kipp Island phase in New York State ca. AD 500-700.

Esox Site:In 1998, working with The Regional Municipality of York, TRCA's Archaeology Unit conducted an archaeological excavation of the western third of the 7-acre Esox site (AlGu-99.) This project was required prior the construction of the Bayview Avenue extension. As a result of this excavation, a collection of 2,496 lithic, faunal and ceramic artifacts were recovered. These artifacts were distributed in three low-density clusters of sizes ranging from 7m X 11m, 9m X 14m and 10m X 15m.

In general the Esox site in its entirety is defined as a multi-component site with two firmly placed culturally discrete occupations. Diagnostic projectile points indicate that the site was used during the PalaeoIndian, early Archaic, Late Archaic, Middle Woodland and Middle Iroquoian periods, 8,000 BC to AD 1300. The area of the site that was excavated in 1998 appears to have been a large drop zone, where a la minuite activities may have taken place by the inhabitants of the Middle Woodland and PalaeoIndian occupations of the site. Many artifacts were likely dropped in this zone as individuals moved from their dwellings to nearby Lake Wilcox to acquire or prepare food. It is possible that the three discrete clusters represent distinct occupations.

Second Stong House: During October of 1997, a limited archaeological investigation was conducted by TRCA's Archaeological Unit at Black Creek Pioneer Village, a 56-acre replica of a 19th century crossroads settlement. A strip of land adjacent to the Stong family's second house was to be disturbed by a proposed facility improvement project. This house was built in the 19th century by Daniel Stong, a Pennsylvania German settler and has been designated a historic structure.

During the course of the excavation, a total of 3,147 artifacts were recovered from 24 excavation units. The artifacts range in age from the early 19th to the early 20th centuries. The artifacts recovered from the site represent a wide range of items that might typically be associated with residential occupations of the later Euro-Canadian historic period.

The archaeological investigation revealed a previously unknown semi-subterranean cistern located adjacent to the Stong house. Limited excavation of the cistern recovered a small sample of artifacts that was used to assess the nature and age of this feature. The diverse mix and age of fill material recovered indicated that the material found in the cistern may have come from a previously existing dump area elsewhere on the Stong property. While the inherent archaeological value of these artifacts is limited, their interpretive value is not as they do provide a very nice glimpse of the types of items found and used in households during the 19th and early 20th centuries.

Subsequent to the archaeological investigation, the BCPV agreed to alter the proposed construction project to avoid disturbing the cultural heritage resources identified.