3D model of a box-type structure under a small cairn near the Bear Trap in Northwest Greenland

This dataset consists of files that can be used to view a high-resolution 3D model of a box-type structure under a small cairn in the vicinity of ‘The Bear Trap’. The interior of the stone box appears to have been completely empty. Similar small stone box structures have been identified and discusse...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Carlson, Daniel F., Walsh, Matthew J., Tejsner, Pelle, Thomsen, Steffen
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Zenodo 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5635980
https://zenodo.org/record/5635980
Description
Summary:This dataset consists of files that can be used to view a high-resolution 3D model of a box-type structure under a small cairn in the vicinity of ‘The Bear Trap’. The interior of the stone box appears to have been completely empty. Similar small stone box structures have been identified and discussed by Schedermann (e.g. 1990: 159) for Arctic Small Tool tradition (ASTt) sites on Skraeling Island and by McGee (1979) for Port Refuge in the Canadian High Arctic. Similar and equally enigmatic features have also been described by Knuth (1966/67: 203) for far north and northeast Greenland. They have been alternatively attributed to numerous PalaeoEskimo cultural complexes, but without dated materials from the site current attribution of the feature’s function, significance or date are not possible. The 3D model was created from 280 digital photographs that were processed usingAgisoft Metashape Pro v1.7. More information is provided in processing report and the readme file that accompanies this dataset. The image survey was conducted as part of the Vaigat Iceberg-Microbial Oil Degradation and Archaeological Heritage Investigation (VIMOA) project, which was funded by the Danish Centre for Marine Research and supported by the Arctic Research Centre at Aarhus University, the National Museum of Denmark, the Greenland Institute of Natural Resources, and The Greenland National Museum and Archives in Nuuk. Proper permits for the survey were obtained in advance from the Greenland National Museum and Archives in Nuuk. Walsh et al. (2020) provides an overview of the archaeological surveys conducted during the VIMOA project and Walsh et al. (in prep) provides further details specific to The Bear Trap and surrounding archaeological contexts. Knuth, Egil. (1966/67) The ruins of the Musk Ox Highway. Folk 8-9: 191-219. McGee, Robert. (1979) The Palaeoeskimo occupations at Port Refuge, High Arctic Canada . National Museum of Man Mercury Series. Archaeological Survey of Canada Paper No. 92. Ottawa: National Museums of Canada. Schledermann, Peter. (1990) Crossroads to Greenland: 3000 years of prehistory in the Eastern High Arctic .Calgary: The Arctic Institute of North America of the University of Calgary. Walsh et al. (2020) The VIMOA project and archaeological heritage in the Nuussuaq Peninsula of north-west Greenland. Antiquity 94:e6 doi:10.15184/aqy.2019.230 Walsh, Matthew J., Daniel F. Carlson, Pelle Tejsner, and Steffen Thomsen. The Bear Trap: Reinvestigating a unique stone structure on the northwest tip of the Nuussuaq Peninsula, Greenland. Submitted to Arctic Anthropology