ARCTIC Prehistoric Sources of Chert in Northern Labrador: Field Work and Preliminary Analyses

ABSTRACT. The Torngat Archaeology Project is involved in a raw materials program that includes the “finger-printing ” of certain lithics used by prehistoric cultures in Labra-dor, and the identification of their geological sources. Field work was carried out in 1978 in the Ramah and Mugford areas to...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: M. E. Colleen Lazenby
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
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Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.559.2354
http://pubs.aina.ucalgary.ca/arctic/arctic33-3-628.pdf
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Summary:ABSTRACT. The Torngat Archaeology Project is involved in a raw materials program that includes the “finger-printing ” of certain lithics used by prehistoric cultures in Labra-dor, and the identification of their geological sources. Field work was carried out in 1978 in the Ramah and Mugford areas to sample chert outcrops and search for evidence of prehistoric quarrying and manufacturing activities. Numerous quarries and workshops were discovered id the Ramah Group, and a suite of Ramah and Cod Island chert samples was collected for analyses. Thin sections of four visually similar rock types from Labrador- Ramah chert, Cod Island chert, Saglek quartzite, and Ryan’s quartz- were examined and samples of each were submitted for trace element analysis by neutron activation. Given the high purity of the cherts and the small number of samples used in the preliminary activation analysis, confident identification of and strong discrimination between the four, based on trace element concentrations, were not possible. However, thin section examination enabled identifications and differentiations to be made based on the petrographic features of each of the lithics.