Lethbridge Herald

First Nation says ancient tools found at work site

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Coastal GasLink says it has suspended pipeline work south of Houston, B.C., while claims of the discovery of Indigenous artifacts on the site are investigat­ed.

The company says it has cordoned off the area, requested that a qualified archeologi­st visit the site and the B.C. Oil and Gas Commission will conduct another site visit to investigat­e the claims.

It says an archeologi­cal impact assessment for the site was approved in 2016, but the company and its archeologi­sts were not able to conduct on-site fieldwork during the regulatory and permitting process due to road access issues.

In a statement, Unist’ot’en clan spokeswoma­n Freda Huson says their members have been combing the company’s constructi­on site for a proposed man camp since heavy machinery turned up the forest floor.

The statement says supporters recovered two stone tools on Wednesday and archeologi­sts from the Smithsonia­n Institute estimate one dates back up to 3,500 years.

It says additional stone tools were observed and recorded but the scale and scope of the work requires assistance from profession­al archeologi­sts.

In an open letter with Huson, archeologi­sts Chelsey Armstrong of the Smithsonia­n Institutio­n and Ginevra Toniello of the TsleilWaut­uth First Nation call for a review of the archeologi­cal overview assessment.

The newly found artifacts reveal that archeologi­cal heritage is clearly present and that any assessment should be conducted in consultati­on with the clan, says the letter addressed to the archeology branch of the B.C. Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations.

The Coastal GasLink pipeline would transport natural gas from northeaste­rn British Columbia to LNG Canada’s export terminal in Kitimat on the coast.

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