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Archaeology
Archaeology Builds Understanding of Human-Environment Interactions and Advances Reconciliation
While 51社区黑料Archaeology celebrates 50 years of teaching and research atop Burnaby Mountain, Jonathan Driver specializes in understanding the past lives of the people from similar landscapes thousands of years ago.
Animal bones are keys to unlock past lives of our ancestors
Zooarchaeologist, Jonathan Driver, has spent over four decades working to understand the past relationships between people and their environments. Intrigued by the lives of peoples in mountain environments, Driver has chosen Western North America as the area for much of his research.
He uncovers and evaluates biofacts, specifically animal bone fragments. 鈥淚f you want to understand how our ancestors lived, you have to study animal bones,鈥 says Driver.
Driver identifies the ancient specimens through comparison with modern skeletons, and draws conclusions about past environments, ancient farming practices, hunting methods, the cultural importance of specific species, and more.
For example, while excavating in Northern BC鈥檚 Tse鈥橩鈥檞a National Historical Site, Driver and his team uncovered two intact raven skeletons dating to the end of the last ice age, buried by ancestral First Nations people, with artifacts carefully placed at their feet.
鈥淭hese are the oldest examples of ceremonial burial of birds in the Americas,鈥 says Driver. 鈥淭hey show that the importance of Raven in First Nations cultures extends into the deep past鈥.
In a very different setting in southern Colorado Driver and his students showed that farming communities around 1200 A.D. altered the environment, and he documented the transition from hunting wild game to intensive production of domestic turkey. 鈥淭here is an interesting parallel to modern production of meat鈥 notes Driver. 鈥淚n Colorado ancestral Native American communities increased maize production to feed domestic animals, just as we do in North America today鈥.
Driver has made significant contributions to zooarchaeology while seeing first-hand the scientific, technological, and social advancements the department has undergone since it opened its doors 50 years ago.
鈥淥ne of the biggest changes I鈥檝e seen is our attitude towards working with First Nations communities,鈥 says Driver. 鈥淲e no longer just dig up things that we find interesting. We are expected to work in collaboration with the descendant community to ensure our research is bound to their interests.鈥
Community-led research is improving the practice of Archaeology
Testament to this change lies in the highly collaborative and community driven approaches that Archaeology鈥檚 Dana Lepofsky takes to understand social and ecological impacts of human-environment interactions.
Her research combines technical and methodological approaches. It also brings together different archaeological perspectives like zooarchaeology, ethnobotany and incorporates First Nations traditional knowledge. This holistic approach builds understanding of how our ancestors lived but it can also help us understand and mitigate environmental challenges, and protect heritage and identity. By incorporating western science and traditional knowledge Lepofsky鈥檚 research also facilitates social change today with respect to how we value different knowledge systems.
Sharing a curiosity, passion and concern for how coastal First Nations have lived and are living is a great starting place. 鈥淔rom the ground up, my research is a part of a growing conversation,鈥 says Lepofsky. 鈥淓ither a Nation will come to me and say 鈥業 would like to work with you鈥 or, I鈥檒l go to a Nation and say 鈥榳hat can we do together, and what can I bring as a western scientist?鈥欌
Archaeology informing present-day stewardship
Part of Lepofsky鈥檚 research involves studying ancient berry, clam, and forest gardens which have the ability to inform us on how First Nation communities have managed their resources and fostered food security over long periods of time.
鈥淎 big part of traditional knowledge is that it reflects generations and generations of people learning what worked and what didn鈥檛,鈥 says Lepofsky. 鈥淭hose who have the long-term history and the local knowledge, I think, are better suited to make decisions about things like food security and food sovereignty and managing our precious resources going forward.鈥
Cultural preservation and education contribute to reconciliation
Lepofsky also works to supports cultural preservation and education by collaborating with BC First Nations on innovative ways of sharing their language, stories, and connections to the land (HUYAT Our Voices, Our Land: ). She and her team are currently developing educational resources to tell the history and current social-ecological context of Laxgalts鈥檃p, a culturally significant watershed of the Gitga鈥檃t people of northern coastal BC.
These archaeologists are improving our understanding of how First Nations in BC lived while paving the way for reconciliation in archaeological research, informing present management decisions and preserving culture and heritage.
This is the third feature in a series celebrating Archaeology鈥檚 accomplishments over the past 50 years.