Texarkana Gazette

WOODEN CANOE FOUND IN IRMA’S AFTERMATH COULD BE LINKED TO THE 1600S

- By Lisa J. Huriash

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.—Florida researcher­s may be closer to figuring out the mysterious origin of an old canoe that surfaced after Hurricane Irma.

Using a technique known as radiocarbo­n dating, archaeolog­ists recently determined the wood used to create the vessel could date to the 1600s.

“A find like this is always exciting, especially when it represents something completely unlike the types of canoes previously discovered,” said Paul N. Backhouse, director of the Ah-Tah-Thi-Ki Museum at the Big Cypress Seminole Indian Reservatio­n, and Tribal Historic Preservati­on Office.

The canoe likely “had quite a biography during its lifespan,” he said.

A photograph­er scouting for damage after Irma made the discovery in the city of Cocoa, about 35 miles east of Orlando, near the Kennedy Space Center.

Randy “Shots” Lathrop said he snapped a photo of the vessel with his phone and texted it to his friend, an underwater archaeolog­ist, to make sure he found something of value.

On Thursday, state officials loaded it onto a truck, “tucked it in” safely and took it to Tallahasse­e. Officials are beginning a process to make sure the canoe doesn’t deteriorat­e before it is memorializ­ed in a museum.

State officials said radiocarbo­n dating showed there’s a 50 percent chance that the wood used to make the canoe dates to the 1600s. Meanwhile, the paint and wire nails found on it might indicate that the canoe itself wasn’t built—and used—until the 1800s or 1900s.

There’s a smaller chance the canoe dates between 1760 to 1818.

“The mystery is still not solved. It’s only starting,” Lathrop said. “I’d certainly like to learn more about it.”

The canoe certainly has caught the attention of the Seminole Tribe of Florida, Backhouse said. “The dating, constructi­on and other details of the canoe are unusual and intriguing,” said Backhouse.

Sarah Revell, spokeswoma­n for the Florida Department of State, won’t yet guess where it came from.

“Until we do a more thorough analysis of the constructi­on techniques and consult with the Seminole tribe and other tribes, we can’t be sure at this time if the canoe was associated with any particular tribe,” she said.

Revell said the canoe is destined for a museum—eventually.

“It could take a year or longer to complete the preservati­on process,” she said.

Though such canoes are considered rare, they have been found across the state through the decades.

“Florida has the highest concentrat­ion of dugout canoes in the world,” Revell said. “We have more than 400 documented dugout canoes in our state. Each canoe is important in that it adds to our database and helps fill out the picture of how people used these canoes over thousands of years.”

Lathrop said he is thrilled he was part of it all. “I’m glad we could save it,” he said.

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