Montreal Gazette

Rescue archeology begins at Louisbourg

N.S. gravesites face threat from coastal erosion

- MICHAEL MACDONALD

• The former residents of a massive 18th-century fort in Cape Breton have long since died, but David Ebert says they still have plenty to tell us.

Ebert, a strategic adviser with Parks Canada, is part of a team exhuming human remains from a large graveyard outside the gates of the Fortress of Louisbourg National Historic Site.

“We have uncovered five sets of skeletal remains already and we’ve found a number of artifacts to go with them,” Ebert said in an interview.

“One of the skeletons had eight buttons that were lying on top of it. Clearly, somebody had been buried in a fancy coat ... When you see someone buried in a fine piece of clothing, it obviously shows some love and respect for that individual.”

Up to 1,100 residents of the French fort are buried at the site, which must be excavated because it is threatened by coastal erosion. Parks Canada has referred to the project as rescue archeology.

“Skeletons can tell you a lot of things,” Ebert said, citing the fact that malnutriti­on as a child can leave permanent marks on one’s teeth. “They are marks you’ll see right until the day you die ... There’s lots of little hints that the skeleton gives you about what sort of life they led.”

A dozen University of New Brunswick department of anthropolo­gy students started digging last week. The five-year project will document and protect the burial grounds at Rochefort Point, where the shoreline has retreated about 90 metres over the past 300 years.

Ebert said the staff and students are well aware they are in a sacred space.

“Science isn’t our No. 1 priority,” he said. “It’s the respect and dignity that all people deserve in death ... I tell the (students), ‘Remember, this is somebody’s great, great, great grandfathe­r or grandmothe­r.’ ”

The fort, which is so big it is a fortified town, was built in 1713 and abandoned in 1760 after decades of fighting between the French and British. Even though only one-quarter of the fortificat­ion has been rebuilt, it remains the largest of its kind in North America. Every year, about 82,000 people visit this site, a half-hour drive south of Sydney, N.S.

Amy Scott, project director of the bioarcheol­ogy field school, said the project is giving students the best kind of hands-on experience.

“It’s so very special for us to be able to have this partnershi­p with Parks Canada,” said Scott, an assistant professor at the University of New Brunswick. “It’s a very rich archeologi­cal site out here.”

The students will stay in the field until Aug. 20, when the recovered remains and artifacts will be taken to Scott’s laboratory for further analysis.

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