Health & Science

History Emerging from the Ice

Melting Glaciers Lead to Multitude of Archeological Discoveries

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Dr. William Fitzhugh at Zhokhov Island
Adelaide deMenil, Smithsonian Institution

Dr. William Fitzhugh documenting the excavation of the 8,000-year-old Zhokhov Island site, in High Arctic Russia.

 
 
 
Ancient Throwing Dart
Stephen Krasemann

A field researcher displays the foreshaft of a ancient throwing dart recovered from a melting ice patch in southern Yukon. The stone tip is still lashed to the shaft with sinew. It has been radiocarbon-dated at 4,500 years before present.

 
 
 
Researchers in Canadian Yukon
Government of Yukon

Field researchers at an ice patch examine a recently discovered barbed, hunting arrow. From left to right archaeologist Greg Hare, Jim Baker (Carcross-Tagish First Nation) and Gordon Jarrold (Univ. of Alaska, Fairbanks).

 
 

All Things Considered, January 11, 2003 · The world's glaciers are slowly melting, and as they do, artifacts from the near and distant past are emerging from the ice. NPR's Eric Niiler reports on the discovery of archaeological treasure.

During the short Siberian summer on Russia's Zhokhov Island, Smithsonian anthropologist William Fitzhugh discovered a 4,000-year-old basket. "I was digging down through this stuff, it was literally like banging your hammer on a frozen cement floor," he recalls. Then Fitzhugh noticed yellow-colored fibers poking through the frozen dirt. "And gradually by squirting water and melting it a little more, what I realized that it was the top of a basket," he says.

Because the basket was in near-perfect condition, it gave scientists much more detailed information about the daily lives of the people who called the island home.

The ice has preserved many similar items, but the unfrozen life of these artifacts is short. James Dixon, an anthropologist at the University of Colorado, says the objects decay rapidly when exposed to the air. To locate emerging artifacts quickly, Dixon and a colleague developed a digital map covering a portion of Alaska. A computer program matches places where glaciers are melting with likely routes taken by early Americans. The map gives Dixon and his team a good idea of where to look. "We're finding arrows with complete shafts with the arrows still attached, even pouches, nets and hats and trail food," he says.

Greg Hare, an anthropologist with the provincial park system in the Canadian Yukon, has picked up more than 130 objects in the past five years. His discoveries range from 90-year-old horseshoes to 7,000-year-old hunting darts.

"Often you’re walking along and the first impression is the decaying smell," Hare says. "There's a pretty good chance you're going to be finding something old." The smell comes from ancient piles of caribou dung. Hare says the dung was deposited where animals congregated -- and where early travelers went to hunt caribou. As researchers pick up garbage left by ancient humans, researchers say they're also finding clues about the past climate.

The Smithsonian's Fitzhugh says ancient plant life in the hunting areas may tell us what the climate was like thousands of years ago.

And as temperature increase across Arctic and sub-Arctic regions, it may affect modern-day descendants of these ancient people. Fitzhugh travels to Mongolia this summer to study a tribe of reindeer herders whose animals are growing hungry as the plants they depend on disappear.

 

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