(Reprinted with
permission courtesy of York U Magazine, Summer 2005 edition)
Before students and professors lived here, York campus was a popular
spot with ancient Aboriginal Peoples – for thousands of years in
fact. “It’s one of the top 10 archaeological sites in Ontario –
which is saying something,” says Ron Williamson of Archaeological
Services Inc.
The partially excavated Parsons site (as the dig on York’s campus
boundary is known) revealed a village that was inhabited year-round
by up to 2,000 people over a 20-year period. More than 300,000
artifacts have been recovered. “And there’s a lot more to come,”
says Williamson.
When glaciers receded 11,000 years ago, Palaeo-Indian (10,000-7,000
BC) populations began to move into Ontario. They, along with
descendants and other cultural groups, left behind a clear record of
their lives with artifacts such as spear and arrowheads, pottery
vessels fragments, beads, and remnants of their homes. The Ontario
Iroquoian (AD700-1651) village dates from about 1450-1550. Villages
were usually occupied between 5 to 30 years and would contain (as
the Parsons site does) several cigar-shaped longhouses which
sheltered up to 50 people.
What would attract Aboriginal Peoples to the area? “Rivers and their
tributaries were a natural migration path for people and also
afforded a source of water,” says Cathy Crinnon, archaeologist with
Toronto and Region Conservation. “Riverine environments also
attracted wildlife.” Parsons is among 170 known archaeological sites
in Toronto.
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