Artifacts
discovered in Alaska's Wrangell-St. Elias National
Park
and Preserve include stone projectile points such as this dart head
that
still retains traces of red ochre and the sinew used to lash it to
a wooden
shaft. Photo: C. Lee.
CU-Boulder News Center
CU-Boulder Scientists Search For Artifacts In
Melting Glaciers
Oct. 14, 2003
Researchers at the University of Colorado at Boulder
continued their search in southeast Alaska last summer to pinpoint
rapidly melting glaciers and ice fields that hold prehistoric human
artifacts before exposure triggers their decomposition.
For thousands of years, humans hunted on the glaciers and ice fields that cover
what is now the Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve in southeast
interior Alaska. During the summer months these ancient ice fields attracted
caribou and other animals seeking refuge from insect swarms that blanket Alaska
during summer.
At the same time, humans hoping to feed their families visited ice fields with
the goal of finding meat. Unfortunately for the ancient hunters, they dropped
some of their tools, or perhaps missed when they shot their arrows or spears.
Over time, those weapons and tools were encased in ice, until now.
As global warming continues to melt glaciers and ice fields at a rapid rate,
discarded or lost tools that were frozen in glaciers are being released from
the ice, according to James Dixon, curator of the Museum and Field Studies
program at the CU Museum of Natural History and a fellow at CU-Boulder's Institute
of Arctic and Alpine Research, or INSTAAR.
Among their most significant finds this year were wooden arrow shafts, one
with red ochre paint, and a stone point still lashed to its wooden shaft. They
also found a birch bark container or basket recently thawed from the ice. What
is significant about the findings is that because they are organic materials,
they can be radiocarbon dated. However, when stone spear points and other stone
artifacts are found, their age can only be estimated.
"Global warming has exposed artifacts from the ice that has kept them preserved
for hundreds and even thousands of years," he said. "So there is some urgency
to our search for these artifacts, because once exposed they decompose or are
destroyed quickly."
It helps to know where to look, so Dixon and INSTAAR Research Scientist William
Manley have spent three years developing, testing and refining a Geographic
Information System model, or GIS, to identify glaciers and ice fields in the
Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve that are likely to hold artifacts.
To create their model, they pulled together datasets including topographic,
cultural, biological and glacial information, and then layered all of the maps
on top of each other to help pinpoint areas most likely to be artifact sites,
according to Manley.
On their first trip to Alaska in summer 2001, they identified 32 promising
sites and found several artifacts. They also had some help. A local sheep hunter
in one of the areas found what turned out to be a 750-year-old antler projectile
point used for hunting. Over the past two years, the researchers gathered more
data and tweaked their GIS model.
"For example, we looked at how glaciers melt, which glaciers are close to known
rock sources that could have been used to make tools, and we looked for the easiest
routes across rough terrain," Manley said.
"We were trying to focus on smaller areas," he said. "These models are used to
guide us in the field. After compiling the data, we go to the field and test
it."
This summer, the researchers investigated 141 sites, five of which yielded
prehistoric artifacts and many others that had more recent artifacts.
"The work of responsible and innovative outside researchers like Dr. Dixon of
the University of Colorado is of great benefit to the National Park Service," said
Ted Birkedal, an archaeologist in the Alaska Region of the National Park Service. "Not
only has he brought our attention to the fact that there are archaeological sites
located in the snowfields and icefields of Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and
Preserve, but he and his co-researchers have also helped with the overall archaeological
inventory of the vast park acreage."
Birkedal added that visitors to the park should not look for the artifacts
on their own because it is a federal crime to collect artifacts without an
authorized permit and outside the context of scientific research.
"These discoveries help us to see the organic component of these ancient cultures," Dixon
said. "They provide us with insight into human adaptation at high altitudes and
latitudes and into human culture that we haven't seen before."
The National Science Foundation's Office of Polar Programs funded the research
in 2001 and again in 2003.
Contact: James Dixon, (303) 735-0464
William Manley, (303) 735-1300
Craig Lee, (303) 735-7807
Jane Tranel, (907) 644-3513
Ruth Ann Warden, (907) 822-3476
Greg Swenson, (303) 492-3113
URL: http://www.colorado.edu/news/releases/2003/397.html