Article Origin
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Alberta
Guide to Indian Country Page 8
Almost 15,000 hectares near the small prairie community of Rumsey will
soon receive protected status under the Environmental Protection
Department's Special Places 2000 program. The land, vegetation, also
contains several pre-historic archeological sites, evidence of early
settlement and use by Plains Indians people.
The stone structures at Rumsey are just a fraction for the tens of
thousands of archeological sites in Alberta. Stone tipi rings,
ceremonial circles, cairns and ancient animal remains dot the prairie
landscape. On a high ridge in the Crowsnest Pass, worked over deposits
of chert--a stone prized for making arrowheads and other tools--show
signs of having been used by prehistoric hunters. On mountain tops and
canyon walls, rock art tells undeciphered stories of past cultures.
Gerry Ward, with Alberta Community Development, estimated that
archeologists have only looked at five per cent of the prehistoric
evidence in the province, but already there are about 25,000 sites on
record. Only a few of these sites, Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump and
Writing-On-Stone, for example, have been designated for special
protection. But all archeological and historical artifacts in the
province are given some protection by the Historical Resources Act,
passed in 1973 through the environment conservation authority.
The act prohibited the unauthorized collection or disturbance of all
antiquities, with penalties of up to a year' imprisonment, a $50,000
fine, or both. It also required all road, mining or building developers
to submit plans to the province's archeological survey. If
archeological sites are known to exist in the area slated for
development, even if there is good potential for there being such sites,
the developer is required to hire expert consultants to examine the
impact of their plans on the resource.
Depending on the significance of the site, the finds must at least be
accurately recorded. Where the artifacts are considered highly
significant, the development plans must be modified and can even be
stopped entirely.
"In a sense," Ward said, "every site is protected, but in reality, we
can only concentrate on large-scale developments. We have to depend on
the public's cooperation to protect the other remains."
Ward said that the highest level of protection the government affords
is designation of a site as a provincial historic resource. Only about
a dozen areas which have Aboriginal artifacts have so far received this
designation. All known sites, however, are registered with Alberta
'public lands' on their computer data base.
"The isolation of many of the smaller sites is probably their best
protection," Ward added. "The Majorville Medicine Wheel, for example,
lies on private land and is almost impossible to get to unless you know
exactly where it is and how to get there. The land owner there has also
put up a fence around the site and we've added an interpretive sign."
Little known by the general public, the Majorville Medicine Wheel is
one the of the most significant archeological finds in the province. A
central cairn of stones, about 8.5 m across, is surrounded by a circle
of stones over 24 m in diameter. Twenty eight rock spokes link the
cairn to the outside circle. The building of the central cairn is
believed to have been started 4,500 years ago, with successive
prehistoric peoples adding to the structure through the years.
Many theories have been evolved to explain the significance of medicine
wheels, though the name alone implies that they had religious
significance for the people who build them. Similar structures built in
the early part of this century commemorate the burial places of noted
warriors or chief. Several of the structures appear to be giant
astronomical calendars, indicating the alignment of the stars and the
summer solstice.
Scientists also believe that some of the giant circles may have been
built as part of ceremonies to ensue the fertility of the uffalo herds
or success in hunting.
More than 60 medicine wheels have so far been discovered in Alberta,
including a few built in this century. In fact, there is a medicine
wheel in the Rumsey area, though its site was not included in the lands
designated as a special place.
In southern Alberta, on a hilltop near the Little Bow River, there is
another significant medicine wheel. The central cairn of this Sundial
Medicine Wheel has been scattered and looted, but its basic form is
still discernible. Here the cairn is surrounded by two concentric
circles, split at one space to form a path-like opening. More than 200
tipi rings and another 200 individual cairns attest to the long use of
this site.
Though visits to these sites, with a few exceptions, are not being
encouraged, they are generally open to the public. Recent offerings of
tobacco, cloth and sweetgrass can be seen at many of the sites and, of
course, these too shouldn't be touched.
"Many of these sites are still sacred places to Native people in
Alberta," said Rod Vickers, acting director of Plains Indian Archeology
at the Provincial Museum of Alberta. "I've sometimes left offerings of
tobacco myself, just because it seems appropriate."
Should you find an archeological site or an artifact, don't disturb the
ground or materials on it in any way. As soon as possible, report your
finding to the Archeological Survey of Alberta in Edmonton at
(403)427-2355.
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