HOBLER_3-Property Final - Bella Coola Rock Corporation
Transcription
HOBLER_3-Property Final - Bella Coola Rock Corporation
Credit sheet Project personnel consist of the following individuals. Philip M. Hobler. Project Director, Central Coast Heritage, Associate professor Department of Archaeology, Simon Fraser University. 2962 Starlight Way, Coquitlam V3C 3P5. Phone 604-464-1691. Box 484 Hagensborg, B.C. V0T 1H0, Phone 250-982-2608. Inge R. Dahm. Senior Researcher, Central Coast Heritage. M.A. Simon Fraser University 2962 Starlight Way, Coquitlam V3C 3P5. Phone 604-464-1691. Box 484 Hagensborg, B.C. V0T 1H0, Phone 250-982-2608. Rudy Reimer Field assistant, acting field director. Squamish Nation, M.A. Simon Fraser University. James Hans Field assistant. Nuxalk Nation, Bella Coola B.C. V0T 1C0 Simon Mack Field assistant. Nuxalk Nation, Bella Coola B.C. V0T 1C0 Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 1 Management Summary Two questions guided the investigations. 1) Would archaeological sites be impacted by the proposed quarrying and related activities on the three properties? 2) If sites potentially are to be harmed what actions would prevent or lessen such impacts? We conclude: ¥ That there are archaeological sites in or near the proposed developments. ¥ That at D.L. 444 It is unlikely that quarrying will impact archaeological sites provided a triangle about 300 square meters in area (25 X 25 X 35.4m) in the extreme back east corner be avoided. ¥ That at D.L. 3: With reasonable care and attention to the archaeological remains noted below, impacts to an historic site and two associated CMT s can be avoided. Further action we recommend: During the process of clearing and surface stripping of the Nusatsum property in preparation for quarrying there should be monitoring for archaeological remains. This work need not be continuous during the clearing process. An half-hour examination near the end of each clearing day should be sufficient. Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 2 Contents Credit sheet Management summary Contents Introduction The Development projects The three project areas Project areas background Methodology Resource inventory Resource evaluation Impacts and significance Evaluation of research Management recommendations References cited Appendix 1. Cultural background Appendix 2. Shovel test logs Appendix 3. Archaeological site inventory forms Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 3 List of Figures 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. Location of the Nusatsum property. Location of D.L. 3 and D.L. 444 from 1:50,000 map. Location of D.L. 3 and D.L. 444 from land status map. Location of the proposed Nusatsum gravel pit. Distant aerial view D.L. 444 and D.L, 3. Triangular tree injury and its natural cause. Section of Lt. Palmer s 1862 map of the Bella Coola estuary. Early view of the Bella Coola Estuary from near D.L. 3. Carlson s 1898 map showing the mountain road through D.L. 3 Bella Coola cannery insurance map, 1915. D.L. 444 field survey transects. D.L. 3 field survey transects Rough sketch of Nusatsum shovel test lines. Culturally modified tree, D.L. 3. Site FcSq H-00-T1 Flaked stone artifacts from site FcSo H-00-T1. Tables 1. 2. CMT data for site FcSq H-00-T1. CMT data for site FcSq H-00-T2. Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 4 Introduction. This study, conducted under permit 2000-251, is concerned with the related development of three properties, one in the in the Bella Coola Valley and two above the head of North Bentinck Arm. Our contact is Mr. Tom Roux of 100 Mile House (250) 791-5402. Mr Roux represents No Cents Holdings. The objective of the impact assessment is to determine whether any archaeological sites are likely to be impacted by the proposed activities out and if so to make recommendations concerning them. The persons conducting the assessment are listed on the credit sheet. Hobler has had 32 years of experience in Central Coast archaeology and 33 years on the faculty of the Department of Archaeology, Simon Fraser University. He is resident part time in Bella Coola. Dahm has had nine field seasons of survey and excavation experience and has participated in the field work on over twelve archaeological impact assessments, overviews and related British Columbia Cultural resource management projects. Dahm is also a part time resident of Bella Coola. Rudy Reimer holds B.A. and M.A. degrees in archaeology and has participated in and supervised a number of archaeological impact assessments. Simon Mack is one of the most experienced Nuxalk field workers in forestry and archaeology and has participated in formal archaeological training programmes and numerous overviews and impact assessments. James Hans is a person of remarkable field observation skills. He is a member of the Nuxalk Nation and has participated in a number of AIA projects in his area. Field work took place over five days from August 14th to the 19th., 2000. Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 5 The Development Projects The proposed development is an entirely new economic endeavour for the Bella Coola Valley. Compared with logging, the project s possible environmental and archaeological impacts are limited to an extremely small area. The No Cents projects will involve large scale bedrock granite quarrying and reduction and, at another site, loose sand and gravel quarrying. The shipment of these products will be via a deep water bulk loading facility to be constructed at Sutlej Point. In addition, a small water bottling plant may be built on D.L. 3. The bedrock granite quarrying and reduction to angular gravel will take place on District Lots 444 and 33 near the head of North Bentinck Arm. The quarrying of loose sand and gravel will take place at an immense glacial deposit on the lower Nusatsum River in the middle Bella Coola Valley. The transportation of these products will require the construction of a bulk loading ship terminal at Sutlej Point, North Bentinck Arm. An archaeological impact assessment has already been completed for this area (Dahm and Hobler 2000). Many of the environmental and other assessments for the No Cents projects are now completed. The three remaining properties are the subject of this report. These consist of: 1) 2) 3) The Nusatsum gravel deposit location (Fig. 1). D.L. 444 the back half of the main bedrock quarry (Figs. 2,3). D.L. 3 The site of the water bottling facility (Figs. 2,3). Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 6 Figure 1. Location of the Nusatsum Property Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 7 Figure 2. Location of D.L. 444 and D.L. 3, the Bella Coola Estuary, and head of North Bentinck Arm Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 8 Figure 3. Location of D.L. 444 and D.L. 3, land status map. Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 9 The three project areas. Located in the mid Bella Coola Valley and at the head of North Bentinck Arm, the three properties are within the Nuxalk Nation s territorial claim. There is no overlap with other Native claims. All three are areas which the Nuxalk people once used and in which they still take an active interest. They are not the locations of major aboriginal settlements or of intensive aboriginal land use according to the remaining archaeological, ethnographic and historical evidence. However all are within 3 km of major Nuxalk settlements. This proximity alerted land use planners to the fact that the areas are in a zone of at least medium archaeological sensitivity or potential. Prior logging has greatly reduced the potential for finding pre 1846 culturally modified trees in any of these zones. The Nusatsum property Figure 4. Location of the proposed Nusatsum gravel pit. The terrain consists of a massive gravel deposit 100 m or more in thickness (Fig. 4). Roads, cut banks and other surface exposures indicate this deposit is made up of glacial materials, consisting of rounded to sub-angular granite, grano-diorite and quartzite. Material sizes range from sand through gravel to large cobbles. These materials were deposited by late Pleistocene outwashes from the Nusatsum River. These floods carried masses of material into the Bella Coola Valley at a time when sea level was nearly at the head of the valley. The flat top of the Nusatsum deposit represents the approximate level of the sea at the Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 10 time. This is about 200 m ASL. Microscopic examination of a comparable terrace deposit at Tsini tsini in the upper valley revealed diatoms and sponge spicules indicative of a saline marine environment (Hobler 2000). These depositional events probably took place between 11,000 and 10,000 B.P. On the Tsini tsini terraces a large archaeological site appears to be associated with these early deposits. Pithouses are also found on terraces above the river in the upper valley. There are about four small pithouses at the site of Upper Qwiliuth near Tweedsmuir Lodge and another is reported near Firvale. Radiocarbon dates of 1100 B.P. were obtained from Upper Quiliuth. On the Nusatsum property the steep un-vegetated gravel slope fronting on Highway 20 is the result of recent gravel removal by the Department of Highways. The undisturbed top of the gravel deposit is forested and stable. The area has a varied vegetation, most likely due to past logging activities (between 30-60 years ago). There are also indications of an old fire possibly from the burning of logging slash. Major tree species are; Hemlock, Cedar, Fir, Alder, and Birch. The understory is mainly ferns, devils club and moss. Although it has been logged, the flat top of the deposit is probably otherwise little changed since its formation and appears to be the original level sea terrace surface. As such it is potentially important as a possible location for early archaeological sites. The bedrock slopes of Mt. Nusatsum, or Mt. Nusqalst as it is also known, against which the gravel was deposited will not be impacted by this quarry development and thus are not sampled in this impact assessment. D.L. 444 This landlocked property faces North Bentinck Arm west of the present government dock (Figs. 2,3,5). It is immediately behind or south of D.L. 33 and is an extension of that property further up the slope. Bedrock throughout the block is barely covered by a thin mantle of soil. Wind thrown trees are common due to the lack of soil for anchoring roots. The property is forested with an even stand of conifers. The relatively young age of the trees may be in part due to the inability of the smooth bedrock terrain to permit any trees to attain significant growth without being blown over. Starting from the lower edge of D.L. 444 the gradient increases. The terrain at the top or southern edge of the property is beginning to break into bluffs and ledges. There are traces of poorly developed rock-cut terraces of uncertain geologic age. Late Pleistocene maximum glaciation which peaked around 17,000 B.P. would have scraped the rock bare and may have shaped these incipient rock terrace features. Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 11 Figure 5. Aerial view showing the locations of D.L. 444 and D.L. 3. Photo by R. Reimer. D.L. 3 This property starts at sea level on Highway 20 and slopes up to 150 m in elevation (Figs. 2,3,5). There are some small flat areas in the front close to the road. Like D.L. 444, in places there are poorly defined discontinuous incipient rock-cut terraces. Soil depths vary. In some areas and especially in ravines the much greater age of the forest growth reflects the presence of a deeper soil mantle. Natural damage to older trees does occur in this area and should not be confused with cultural modifications. Low triangular scars on the uphill faces of a few trees seem to represent damage caused by slides or by falling nearby trees. In one case we can clearly see the natural cause of this low triangular scarring (Fig. 6). Project area background A summary of Bella Coola Valley archaeology and Nuxalk traditional cultural practices was prepared for the D.L. 33 report (Dahm and Hobler 2000) and is included below as Appendix 1. The following background observations are specific to the three properties that are the subject of this report. Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 12 D.L 444 and D.L. 3 These blocks, especially D.L. 3 relate to the mouth and estuary of the Bella Coola River and to its historic and precontact human use. The average reach of high tides on the Bella Coola River marks a zone of intensive use by aboriginal people well back into prehistory. In the 1860 s European traders, with the sometimes uneasy concurrence of the Nuxalkmx, also became established in this zone (Figs. 7,8). They used the Nuxalk trail or hired Nuxalk spoon canoes to transport themselves and their goods up the valley to the trails to the interior. The traders served the Cariboo gold rush and its need for more direct sea-land routes to the interior gold fields. Lt. Palmer arrived in 1862 with instructions to survey a route up the valley and across the plateau to Ft. Alexandria on the Fraser. His main route follows the Figure 6. Triangular scar from natural injury. The already established trail along the river fallen tree that caused the injury is still present. but his proposed road to the interior follows the edge of the valley up against the mountains on the south side. The western end of the proposed road ended at the high tide line about 640 meters into the present Lot 3. This is the earliest evidence of proposed development for Lot 3. Also in the early 1860 s, the Military Land Grants Act permitted potential settlers to claim most of the delta up the river to the area known today as Four Mile. These were grants of land in lieu of pensions for retired British military officers. As a result private land owners were registered for much of the property which 20 years later became Indian Reserve No.1. Some of these early 1860 s land grant claims were not settled. The establishment of the reserve in 1882 reclaimed whatever was left of the once private properties. In fact, The Military Land Grant Act Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 13 stated that granted lands could be reclaimed by the government for several purposes one of which was for Indian reserves. Kopas relates that in 1864 there were 16 Whites resident in the valley (1970:109). By 1884 Fillip Jacobsen reported that there were no European settlers in the Bella Coola Valley and even John Clayton was living in Bella Bella at that time (Faa 1995: 81). The report of the 1892 valley survey by Cotton and Palmer mentions that Several settlers had taken up claims in the valley (1893:470). In the 1880 s Adam King was the ranking chief of the Nuxalk river mouth village of Koomkoots. He was the father of Albert King and Sam (King) Pootlass and great grandfather of the current ranking Nuxalk hereditary chief Lawrence Pootlass and elected chief Archie Pootlass. Adam King urged Jacobsen to bring settlers into the valley for the potential employment they might provide for his people. King offered to reward Jacobsen with a piece of land (Faa 1995: 181). Eventually, in 1894 an entire colony of settlers came, a large group of Norwegians who cleared land and farmed in the middle reaches of the valley. As far back into prehistory as we can see there were the Nuxalkmx. The 1860 s gold rush brought the traders and packers. Finally in the 1890 s came full scale agricultural based settlement. Both the earlier activities and the later commercial fishing and logging all had different land use patterns and different needs affecting the valley and its estuary. A few of these affect the archaeological record at D.L. 3. Access The Nuxalkmx gained canoe access from the sea to their main river mouth settlement of Koomkoots on the present reserve townsite by awaiting the tide and ascending on slack water (Figs. 7,8). The head of North Bentinck Arm provided poor anchorage for ships and there were no docking facilities. During the gold rush deep water vessels with Cariboo bound passengers and cargo had to anchor close to the head of the inlet. Goods and people were transferred to river canoes from Koomkoots or one of the other Native villages at the mouth of the river. For three decades beginning in the 1860 s passengers and the trader s freight had to to be poled up the river on the tide in Nuxalk canoes. The business was not sufficient to justify the cost of a dock on the saltwater and the even greater cost of building a saltwater access road. With the establishment of the Norwegian community in 1894-1895 the valley s population Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 14 Figure 7. Part of Lt. Palmer s 1862 map showing the location of the Royal Engineer s camp and the big village of Koomkoots. D.L. 3 is in the left centre in the area labled clif fs . Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 15 Figure 8. View of the Bella Coola estuary probably in the 1890 s taken from the mountain above and just east of D.L. 3. John Clayton s store and buildings are in the right centre. Koomkoots is in the extreme right centre. B.C. Archives and Records Service, Visual records. Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 16 doubled. Within a year there were about 200 Norwegians in the valley in addition to the estimated 200 Nuxalkmx. A saltwater wharf and road access to it became a necessity. In 1896 L. R. Hamlin, a civil engineer, is commissioned by the government to build a wharf on the south side of the estuary. He used timbers salvaged from an unfinished bridge over the Bella Coola at Koomkoots. At the same time he built a rough trail across the mountainside to link the wharf with the road up the valley. The rough trail appears on the Carlson map of 1898 (Faa 1995: 191). The mountain road or cannery trail is remembered as being very difficult. It was so bad the settlers would transport their goods by canoe from the wharf to a tidal slough at the eastern end of Lot 3 closest to where the road up the valley began. A dispute ensued when Clayton fenced off his property (D.L. 3) denying others access to the slough and hence to the wharf. In 1898 Carlson wrote to government officials that:˚ The mountain road is not passable for pack animals or loaded wagons, and in my opinion it will not be possible to get it in good shape for any reasonable amount (Faa 1995:191). On Carlson s 1898 map (Fig. 9) it is described as being an impassable road for loaded wagons . In an 1899 letter Carlson wrote government officials that: the road along the mountain cannot be put in passable condition for summer travel without a great amount of work . In winter it was:˚ impassable ... water trickling down forming hummocks of ice, almost suicidal for a person to attempt to walk it as the lower side of a great part of the road is sheer descent. (Faa 1995: 195). To quiet the dispute the settlers were granted a temporary right of way in March 1899 across the short distance of the northeast corner of D.L. 3 to the tidal slough where they could load wagons. By 1904 there was a bridge across the Bella Coola at Four Mile and another built across the Neceetsconnay to the new mile long wharf on the north side of the bay. The Norwegian settlers now had road access to the sea and in a short time the new settlement was established on the government surveyed lots at the mouth of the Necleetsconnay. Logging Logging in D.L. 3 seems to be of different ages. The construction of the wharf in 1896 must have required some local timber as did the construction of the Bella Coola Cannery which opened in 1900. Once in operation the cannery required prodigious quantities of firewood for its boilers. Firewood would have been obtained locally at first and may account for the numerous old saw cut stumps we observed on the property. Before the firewood and later logging the forest undoubtedly had many culturally modified trees. There were probably many hemlocks stripped for their edible inner cambrium in addition to bark stripped and planked cedars. Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 17 Cannery The Bella Coola Cannery opened in 1900. Its property was divided off the west end of Clayton s original D.L. 3. The insurance map dated 1915 (Fig.10) shows no road access and the impassable mountain road becomes known as the cannery trail . For over twenty years this is the only land access to the cannery and wharf on the south side of the bay. The cannery had housing for Chinese, Japanese, Native, and European staff. A hotel once existed probably on the cannery property facing directly on to the public wharf. Nusatsum property Mt. Nusatsum and the Nusqualst area figure prominently in Nuxalk mythology, history and culture. A major origin story tells of a great flood. The waters rise until only Mt. Nusatsum, the highest mountain in the valley, is visible. The survivors live in a large camp on the upper slopes of Mt. Nusatsum. Eventually the waters subside and the people begin to move down from the mountain. On their descent they learn how to use the various plants and animals for food, clothing etc. and by the time they reach the valley are fully equipped and begin to build villages and re-populate the valley (McIlwraith 1948: II 502-503; Boas 1898: 95-97). The village of Nusqualst at the foot of Mt. Nusatsum was built at that time. It was the largest and most important village when Mackenzie visited in 1893 and called it Great Village . Nusqualst Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 18 Figure 9. Carlson s 1892 map showing L.3. The mountain r oad which later was known as the cannery trail is marked Impassable Road for Loaded Weapons. Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 19 Figure 10. The bella Coola Cannery, 1915. This area was cut out of the original D.L. 3. UBC Library, Special Collections. Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 20 village continued to prosper until the population was decimated by the smallpox epidemic in 1862-63. The few survivors finally deserted in the 1880 s and took up residence in the Nuxalk village of Koomkoots near the mouth of the river. Stories set in the early time period describe land to the west of Bella Bella and the ocean extending up the valley to the east as far as the headwaters of the Atnarko (Clearwater) where the village of Smaien a or Chief Slhextlekwailhx s village sat on the shoreline. Places that are now many miles inland are described as having dangerous tidal currents and whirlpools. One such place was Nukeets Place of the Whirlpool where Hagensborg is today . Another was Mount Xlhikwals in the upper Bella Coola valley which had dangerous currents and where there was always much wind, making it feared by mariners in those distant days . Raiders from the north arrived at Smaien a by sea in canoes (McIlwraith 1948: 89,594-5; Boas 52-53). Holocene geological events match descriptions in some of the very ancient stories of the Nuxalkmx. Archaeological evidence of this very ancient time indicates use of a basic expedient stone took kit with quarry and flaking sites. Sites typical of this Early Period have been found on gravel terraces similar to those in the Nusatsum area. These gravel terraces were deposited at the shorelines of the raised sea as the ice age was ending. Mount Nusatsum is also an important source of squalst , the greenstone used for adzes and points from the Middle Period on. This gives the village it s name Nusqualst, place of squalst . Nusqualst village stretched along the bank of the Bella Coola river from the mouth of Nusqualst creek to above the present highway bridge another 100 meters. A number of traditions have been passed down from these early times into the twentieth century. One of the original inhabitants of Nusqualst, K m lsonxw brought down from Nusm ta, the heavens, the grizzly bear crest which is used even today by descendants of people from Nusqualst. The first written description of the area is from Mackenzie s visit in 1793. He describes a large village and calls it Great Village. Later in the 1860 s Nusqalst is bypassed by the pack trains to the interior who use the trail on the south side as far as Canoe Crossing or alternately the river to that point. Palmer s proposed road to the Interior crosses the Nusatsum almost as far up as the present highway and may be the site of an early Native bridge. By 1895 a rough road had been pushed through to near the mouth of the Nusatsum but early attempts at bridging it failed. Though no specific record has been found of a trail via the Nusatsum to the high alpine and then west to South Bentinck arm there are stories that such a route exists. Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 21 Methodology The field methods and techniques employed in each of the three areas followed the plan set out in the permit application. In this project we accomplished all of our goals of ground coverage and data recording. In all three areas standard recording methods were employed. Shovel tests were recorded with notebook and tape recorder as were other field observations. Photographs were taken. Provincial archaeological site inventory forms were used for recording site data (Appendix 3). In all three properties ground coverage was by a 3-4 person survey crew working as an integrated team. Where terrain permitted crew member spacing was set up for a 15 m view path. Transects were walked in fixed directions kept parallel by compass bearings maintained by the end persons on the line using Sunto compasses for greatest accuracy. In addition proper transect coverage was maintained through the use of a hip chain by the end crew member so that on the next transect the end person has in sight the nearest side line of the previous transect. This avoids gaps or overlaps between transects. Method for D.L. 444 Of the three properties D.L. 444 has the lowest archaeological potential because of its elevation, slope gradient and lack of soil cover (Fig. 2). The relatively recent forest cover precludes the existence of pre 1846 CMTs. The steeply sloping granite bedrock was sampled by standard transects spaced more widely than in higher potential areas. These transects paralleled the slope (Fig.11). Shovel tests were employed only in those areas with relatively level surfaces and with depths of deposits that justify such tests. The extremely thin soil mantle and shallow bedrock precluded shovel tests over most of the area. These conditions result in frequent wind-thrown trees which provide excellent subsurface exposures for archaeological inspection. Shovel test results are tallied in Appendix 2. Informal stratification was employed in the sense that those small flat zones with reasonable soil cover received the additional archaeological attention of shovel tests. Nuxalk AIA policy requires that where possible there be some examination of areas immediately external to the property boundaries. This was possible on the east and south boundaries. The north boundary was covered in the earlier impact assessment of D.L. 33. Since shovel tests proved informative and did not reveal cultural deposits no evaluative tests were necessary. Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 22 Figure 11. D.L. 444 archaeological survey transects centre lines. Method for D.L. 3 Despite its proximity to large Nuxalk settlements, the terrain in this area is not likely to contain major archaeological sites. Road construction some time after 1924 resulted in severe alteration to the entire shoreline zone of D.L. 3, a principal area for archaeological remains. The property is steeply sloping and rocky with few flat areas. Systematic survey transects were run in the upper third of the property. In the difficult steep brushy middle terrain where recent logging has taken place our transects were placed judgmentally (Fig.12). The lower area of cliffs and bluffs above Highway 20 could be inspected adequately from below but could not be laterally traversed. Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 23 Figure 12. D.L. 3 archaeological survey transect centre lines. Method for the Nusatsum property: Both general survey transects and specific shovel test transects were completed (Fig.13). The soil cover and level terrace surface indicate higher archaeological potential, especially for early sites. Therefore shovel tests were conducted at average intervals of 30 m along each transect. Old logging roads criss- cross the terrace surface and run down its side slopes in two places. The road surfaces and associated burms and cuts provide excellent exposures, better than any shovel tests. These were 100% examined. Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 24 Method of site evaluation For all three properties sites were evaluated on the basis of significance to science, to local history and to the public and local community. Method of Impact identification and assessment It is our understanding that for the Nusatsum gravel deposit and for the bedrock quarrying operations in D.L. 444 and 33 the entire present day land surface will be removed down to great depth. There is no possibility of saving or avoiding archaeological sites that are directly in the path of such activity. We have known from the start that any possible archaeological sites in the midst of these quarrying projects will be totally destroyed. In D.L. 3 the proposed water bottling plant has not been sited yet. Its size relative to the size of the property is quite small. Thus, in D.L. 3 there are avoidance options available. Resource Inventory (Field survey findings) D.L. 444 A cluster of three CMT s were found and flagged with yellow CMT ribbon. They are in the extreme southeast corner of the property (Fig.14). These were recorded as site FcSq-H-00-T1 (Appendix 3). They are as follows: Figure 13. Nusatsum property, rough sketch showing shovel test lines. CMT 1 Adzed with a tool about 5 cm in width probably a steel blade, probably girdled the tree all Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 25 around at top and bottom but evidence is only preserved at the top. CMT 2 A large cedar, 6 m from back SE corner of the block, a deep overgrowth, 96 cm diameter, 3 m circumference at the scar, CMT 3 A completely dead cedar, about to fall, height of girdling scar is 1.6 m, back half of tree is missing. These trees are in an essentially second growth area with some evidence of an earlier forest fire. Because of their location in the back corner of the development, they are easily avoidable. Figure 14. Culturally modified tree in D.L. 3. Site FcSq H-00-T1. Table 1. CMT features at Site FcSq H-00-T1. C M T F E A T U R E Temp. Site Number: CMT S P CL TP R E C O R D I N G F O R M FcSq H-00-T1 FEAT DBH SLP LEN 1 C BS girdle cuts 34 N50% 2 C BS rec cuts 96 N20% 0.92m 35cm 3 C BS girdle cuts 3 9 . 5 N25% Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 2 m WID 1.6m THK 107 cm 0 . 5 39cm HAG SDE T M K NT 92 all axe - 10 61 south axe - 0.5 75 all axe - Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 26 D.L.3 We found traces of a narrow rock cut road, site FcSq-H-00-T-2, located well up the slope, about 40 m in elevation above Highway 20. This man made feature resembles a horse trail more than a wagon road. It runs high up among the ledges parallel to the slope. Research later showed this to be the remains of the rough road to the area s first wharf. Both this mountain road as it was known and the wharf were built in 1896 by Hamlin in response to the well justified pleadings of the fledgling Norwegian community. The wharf was just east of the present day remains of the Bella Coola Cannery which was built in 1900. The rock cut sections of the road are barely 2 m in width. Much of the road has been obliterated by side slope erosion. The section we recorded runs about 30 m and is preserved because it was cut into the rock using dynamite (Faa 1995: 173). This section can be found about 80 m west of Frier s ( Lot A inset into Lot 3) west boundary. Two CMT s were found close to the road (Fig. 12). One is a blaze on a small tree and the other is a larger cedar marked by axe cuts. They could be a function of the road construction or could be of aboriginal origin. A number of smallish diameter very old looking saw cut stumps found 200 m west of Frier s west boundary and 80 m back from the road probably represent firewood cutting for the cannery after 1900. Table 2. CMT data for Site FcSq H-00-T2 C M T F E A T U R E Temp. Site Number: CMT S P CL TP R E C O R D I N G F O R M FcSq H-00-T2 FEAT DBH SLP LEN WID THK HAG SDE T M K NT 1 C BS rec cuts 1 5 9 S55% 128cm 40cm 8cm 33cm S axe - 2 C BS blaze cuts 23.5 2cm 99cm E axe - flat Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 39cm 12cm Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 27 Nusatsum Property Site FcSo-H-00-T1: We found early flaked stone materials on a road surface 90 m outside of the property at the base of the hill. The surrounding geological deposit is quite different from the nearby terrace gravels. There are two large pieces of flaked andesite (Fig.15 ). Typology indicates an Early Period age for these two artifacts (10,000-5,000˚BP). The artifacts were not in primary deposition. Despite intensive searching the original cultural deposit from which they may have been derived could not be found. They do not appear to have been transported far by natural processes and show little rolling or edge rounding. Unfortunately their position as part of the road fill could mean recent redeposition by power equipment, possibly from a distant source. Evaluative tests in the road fill were not undertaken as the area is outside of the proposed development property. No CMT s were found anywhere on the Nusatsum quarry property. Stands of old growth timber well off the property to the southwest were not examined but might be the location of CMT s reputed to exist in the general area. Figure 15. Flaked Stone surface finds from site FcSo H-00-T1, plan and side views. Both are of andesite. The length of the top specimen is 9.2 cm. Top is a rough side scraper. Bottom is a notch-spur, characteristic of flake tool technology of the Early Period on the Central Coast. Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 28 Resource Evaluation The field work showed the three properties to be relatively lacking pre-contact archaeological resources. No large or significant clearly pre 1846 archaeological sites were found in the areas slated for development. The three sites found are detailed above and evaluated below. FcSo H-00-T1 For the science of archaeology this site could have been of considerable significance as it is clearly of Early Period age. Sites of this time period are extremely rare on the British Columbia coast and if found intact can provide important new information. Such sites represent the first people to have lived in the area and could date as early as 10,000 years ago. Unfortunately the two pieces of flaked stone that constitute this site were found on a road surface deposit at the foot of a high hill. They appear to be redeposited from an unknown source and hence disconnected from their original site context. It is unlikely that even extensive testing in the immediate area where they were found would yield additional material information. FcSq H-00-T2(road) We know the exact age of this historic trail-road. It was built in 1896. Its integrity is excellent at least in its rock-cut portions. It is the first historical archaeological site associated with the 1894 Norwegian settlement of the Bella Coola Valley to be formally recorded. Bridges, roads and many buildings from the historic settlement have vanished, some systematically removed by dealers for sale elsewhere. Valley residents feel this loss keenly. So far, only a single structure has been preserved as a monument and that has been moved from its original location. This trail-road was used equally by the Nuxalkmx and by the European settlers and is part of the heritage of both. It is recommended that the property owners try to plan future developments in a way that will preserve a stretch, perhaps 50 m, of this original feature for future public historical interpretation. Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 29 FcSq H-00-T2(CMT s) The smaller of these two culturally modified trees is a blaze scar on a small tree that seems to be associated with the road. The bark stripped cedar, while close to the road, is on a tree large enough to have been modified prior to 1846. As for historical significance to the Bella Coola Valley communities the two modified trees on this site are not as important as the site s major cultural feature represented by the historic rock-cut trail. Impacts and significance: a strategy of avoidance Site FcSo-H-00-T1 is not impacted by the proposed No Cents development. In effect avoidance has already occurred. The work on the project will take place more than 50 m from the site. Because of the high permeability of this gravel outwash fan it is unlikely that drainage shifts resulting from the site clearing and gravel quarrying could affect the site. Site FcSq-H-00-T-1 This CMT site is in the extreme southeast corner of D.L. 444, the upper back corner of the proposed development. It is well flagged and easily avoided. By excluding from development a triangle formed by the southernmost 20 m on the eastern boundary of the property and the eastern most 20 m of the southern boundary, the entire CMT area will be protected. Site FcSq-H-00-T-2 Both the road feature and the CMT s are in a small area marked on the site sheet. The site is far enough away from the proposed water bottling facility that attention to its presence in the planning stages should be sufficient to save it from harm. It is on a steep ledged side slope and it is unlikely that any development will occur in this area. Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 30 Evaluation of Research The authors are satisfied with the intensity of ground coverage and frequency of subsurface tests in the three properties. While there can never be absolute certainty that all archaeological sites have been found, the three properties were thoroughly examined to full AIA standards. The results are about what was expected. In the case of the flat terrace surface at the Nusatsum quarry site the possibility of an early archaeological site caused us to employ an intensive shovel testing strategy, with negative results. Management Recommendations The authors believe that with care and attention the completion of the proposed No Cents projects will not impact archaeological or historic sites. One of the sites found was out of the area of the Nusatsum quarry development. The CMT site in D.L 444, FcSq H-00-T1, is easily avoided as suggested above. Development of the water bottling plant in D.L. 3 should be planned with the location of site FcSq H-00-T2 in mind. As that site is in the steepest terrain of the property and well away from the water source stream, avoidance should be easy. We recommend archaeological monitoring of the clearing and initial surface stripping of the Nusatsum terrace surface prior to gravel quarrying. Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 31 References Cited Bjork, Kenneth O. 1971, Bella Coola. Americana Norvegica.Vol.3. Universitetsforlaget Oslo Boas, Franz 1898, The Mythology of the Bella Coola Indians. Memoirs of the American Museum of Natural History, Vol II(1): 25-127. Cotton, A.F and R.E. Palmer 1893 Report of Surveys in the Bella Coola Valley. British Columbia Sessional Papers , Crown Land Surveys pp. 467-470, Victoria. Dahm, Inge R. and Philip M. Hobler 2000, The No Cents Granite Quarry at D.L. 33, An Archaeological Impact Assessment. Report for permit 2000-108. On file Archaeology Branch, Victoria. Faa, Eric 1995, Norwegians in the Northwest. Runestad, Victoria. Hobler, Philip M. 2000, The Early Period Site of Tsini Tsini, the 1994, 1995 and 1996 Excavations. FcSm 11 Permit report 96-085. On file with Culture Library, Archaeology Branch, Victoria. Kopas, Cliff 1970, Bella Coola. Mitchell Press Ltd. Vancouver. McIlwraith, T.F. 1948, The Bella Coola Indians. University of Toronto Press. Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 32 Appendix 1 Cultural Background (Taken from D.L. 33 Report) The summary of area archaeology and Nuxalk traditional cultural practices given below is from the the authors report on the archaeological impact assessment for D.L.33 at Sutlej Point (Dahm and Hobler,2000). That property is immediately adjacent to D.L. 444 and D.L. 3 reported above. The background is generally applicable to the three properties which are the subject of the current report except that the latter have no evidence of burials or memorial activities. Cultural background information specific to the three properties that are the subject of the current report is presented in the main text under the heading Project area background . The ten thousand years have been divided into three broad time periods based on changes in artifact types, site types and associated radiocarbon dates. The Early Period from 10,000 BP (before present) to about 5,000 BP is represented by a technological system consisting of heavy flaked stone choppers, probably for wood working, stone scrapers, elongate leaf-shaped points and other flaked stone tools including small blades, microblades , made from widely traded obsidian, a volcanic glass-like rock. Due to factors such as fluctuating sea levels, nonsedentary land use, and low population densities, only a few archaeological sites from the Early Period have been identified. Early Period archaeological sites on the outer Central Coast are probably under water, having been inundated by rising post glacial sea levels with the melting of the earth s glacial ice caps. In contrast, in the inner coastal fjords and river valleys maximum isostatic depression of the land surface by massive accumulations of glacial ice resulted in an episode of significant uplift following ice melt. Thus the earliest potential human occupation sites in the inner coast are on benches and terraces above present rivers up to 200 m in elevation and in salt water areas at similar elevations. During the Middle Period from about 4,500 BP to about 2000 BP the stone tool kit shifts gradually from tools made by flaking to tools made by pecking, grinding and polishing. Ground stone adzes, celts and wedges appear as well as tools and other objects of bone, antler and shell. Artifacts of the latter materials include composite toggling harpoon heads and composite bipoints of bone; mussel shell knives and scrapers; bird bone awls, ornaments and ceremonial art. The large shell midden deposits of the semi-permanent settlements of this period have preserved faunal remains of a variety of fish, especially salmon and herring, mammal species including deer, goat and beaver and a variety of birds. During this period the basis for the complex cultures observed by Europeans in the historic period is first established. There is evidence of art, of differentiating levels of social status, and of trade between the interior and the coast and along the coast. Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 33 The prolific archaeological evidence from the Late Period (2000 BP to 200 BP) indicates the continuing development and specialization of subsistence technologies and social and cultural practises. Stone artifact assemblages are dominated by pecked and ground perforated and un-perforated stone discs, a variety of hand mauls and hammers, polished greenstone adze blades and celts, and hammer stone grinders . A recent study has shown that these hammerstone grinders are actually the throwing stones of a Nuxalk game called Sktsa (Crompton 1995). Small flaked triangular arrow points of obsidian and basalt are also found. Bone and antler objects include unilaterally barbed harpoon points, splinter awls, spindle whorls, bark beaters, blanket pins, whistles and ornaments. There are also large numbers of small pointed bone objects that represent composite fishing gear such as bone hooks, leisters, and herring rakes. Artifacts of shell include knives, scrapers, rattles and ornaments. Wood and fibre artifacts are only preserved in rare anaerobic environments, wet sites , such as mud in intertidal zones, lakes or swamps. Wood fish weir stakes and fish traps, boxes and bowls, arrow shafts and fish hooks and fibre hats, baskets, mats, ropes and string have been found at wet sites dating to this period. Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 34 The Bella Coola Valley and Estuary Middle Period sites are poorly represented in the Bella Coola Valley, probably because of the valley s long history of flooding and channel change. Between 15,000 and 11,000 BP the ice melted and sea levels rose inundating the Bella Coola and even the Atnarko Valleys. Shortly after this the land, relieved of the pressure of overlying ice, rose and sea shores retreated to near the present position at the mouth of the river. Throughout the Bella Coola Valley, Early Period artifacts such as choppers, points and flakes are found on remnants of elevated gravel terraces and elevated dunes formed at the time of higher sea levels. The site of Tsini Tsini on a high gravel terrace near the confluence of the Atnarko and Talchako Rivers is the one Early Period site in the Bella Coola Valley that has been excavated (Hobler, 2000). This site has produced pebble choppers, elongate leaf shaped points, obsidian microblades and an unprecedented volume of lithic debitage, all typical of the Early Period. Early occupation of the valley is also related in Nuxalk oral histories. There are a number of detailed origin stories which describe the sea invading the valley to its head and one relating that the Atnarko river once flowed the other way (south) to the sea. All archaeological sites on the valley floor date to the Late Period, 2,000 to 200 BP and to post European contact times. Earlier settlement sites along the river banks and sites such as fish weirs have been destroyed by fluctuations caused by periodic flooding and river course changes. McIlwraith s informants reported 26 village sites in the Bella Coola Valley (McIlwraith, 1948 p.5-13 ). Excavations of village sites at Qwliuth (FcSm 6), Nusqalst (FcSo 1), Stskiutl (FcSq 8) and Snxlhh (FcSq 4) and archaeological surveys conducted for research, heritage inventory and impact assessments, as well as information recorded by early ethnographers, have provided a large material inventory for this period in the valley (Hobler and Bedard 1992). A variety of structural remains ranging from pithouses (circular house pit depressions) to large post and beam plank houses built on the ground and also on stilts with floors up to 10 m. above the ground are found in the valley. Shallow pit structures have been found in the upper valley at Qwliuth near Tweedsmuir lodge. The pit lodges of Upper Qwliuth produced a radiocarbon date of 1170±80 BP. Pithouses are also reported on the south side of the river opposite Firvale, and near Nusqalst creek. At Nusqalst village remains of rectangular plank houses built on stilts as well as surface houses were reported and excavated. At Snxlhh (near Four Mile) large rectangular plank houses were built on short posts around large central hearth mounds. Refuse middens at village sites have produced prehistoric artifacts of stone, bone, antler and shell and also faunal and floral remains such as fish bones, mussel shells, deer, bear and goat bones and teeth and bird bones. Large amounts of elderberry seeds were found at Nusqalst. Storage or cache pits in the form of small circular depressions are often found in and around village sites in the upper valley. A variety of European artifacts were found at Snxlhh. Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 35 Wooden weir fish traps were used to trap spawning salmon. Remains of fish weirs, where they have survived, appear as multiple lines of wooden stakes protruding from the river bed. Fish weirs also incorporated additional perishable components such as nets or basket traps. Each village would have had a fish trap near by. A small stone wall type fish trap has been reported close to the head of the valley. Other archaeological sites found in the valley include rock art, both petroglyphs and pictographs, bear traps, camp sites and lithic scatters, rock shelter cache sites, trails and culturally modified trees (CMTs). The most common types of CMTs are bark stripped trees, plank removals from living trees and remnants of aboriginal logging. Logged trees include canoe trees, sectioned and test holed trees. Hemlock was bark stripped for the inner cambrium which was chopped and pounded into edible cakes. In 1793 Mackenzie reports huge numbers of bark stripped hemlock trees. Both red and yellow cedar were bark stripped and logged for a variety of products from canoes, paddles, poles, planks and house posts to mats, hats, baskets and masks. Scars on the oldest CMTs have often healed over and are not easily discernible prior to cutting. The scars can be roughly dated by ring counting or more accurately dated by sophisticated dendrochronology. The oldest date for a CMT in B.C. is A.D. 1467 (Eldridge and Eldridge 1988). CMTs are ubiquitous and are commonly found in stands of old growth forest. Burials and related sites In pre-contact and early contact times in the Bella Coola area the dead were most often interred in boxes behind the village along the edge of the forest and at the upstream and downstream ends of settlements. Some deceased were placed in boxes in caves remote from villages. Tree burials, especially for children, and box burials on the top of burial poles have also been recorded. Twins were always placed in trees. A few burials in small mortuary houses can still be observed in the upper valley. The transition from flexed burials in traditional graves to extended burials in cemeteries began in the late 1880 s and reflects the beginning of mission activities in the valley. Tombstones came into use in the 1890 s but were not always placed on the graves. Traditional Nuxalk beliefs and practices concerning spirits and the afterlife are expressed in the variety of ways of dealing with the dead. These are relevant to the interpretation of the the traditional use site (FcSq 5) in the quarry development area. Included in the causes of death are natural causes, war, death by witchcraft, death by being wanted or needed in the spirit world, somewhat akin to being to good for this world . Death from illness, disease and other natural causes was attributed to many things including witchcraft and breaking taboos . In traditional times although there are numerous causes of death, death by accident or misadventure isn t one of them. When a canoe is capsized on the ocean and it s occupants are drowned.... The Bella Coola do not consider a drowning a mere accident - it is because Qomoqua was hungry and desired human flesh (McIlwraith 1948: 434). After four days the various constituents of a person have departed the physical remains and Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 36 they can be disposed of in an appropriate manner. The remains had to be properly disposed of so they could not be used as a conduit for the spirit or ghost to return to the village. A heavy stone was placed on the back of the neck of the deceased in the burial box. When the box was in the grave boards were placed over it with a heavy stone at each corner to prevent the return of the ghost. Once the grave was filled to ground level more boards were laid over it and rocks piled on them. Sometimes as a further deterrent four stakes were placed at the corners with cedar bark ropes strung between them on the east and west sides. Four spruce saplings were cut and placed between the grave and the village, or on each side of the grave, their sharp needles forming another barrier. Later, European style picket fences around the grave served the same purpose. Individual graves were left unidentified so any returning spirits would be confused. Graves were also left unmarked so that witches could not identify the remains of the deceased and use them to attack family and friends. Graves of chiefs and other powerful individuals were not identified for the same reasons. Memorial posts, poles or stones are placed after the memorial potlatch, usually held a year or more after the death. They were sometimes placed near the grave but did not mark it directly for reasons already mentioned. Memorial poles were also placed in front of residences and in other appropriate places. After conversion to Christianity memorial poles or tombstones were sometimes placed in front of the church. In more recent times the memorial stone is placed at the burial site in the cemetery. McIlwraith describes three types of traditional memorial posts. The first is a wooden post carved with the crests of the deceased. This type is equivalent to a totem pole erected during the persons life and indeed sometimes the totem pole was moved to the cemetery to serve as a memorial. The second type consists of uncarved poles set upright in the cemetery, each one representing a potlatch given by the deceased. The third type is made of boards attached to a pole. The boards are painted with pictures of valuables such as coppers, canoes and slaves, which were distributed by the deceased at potlatches (McIlwraith,1948: Plates 18-24, 442443). Once tombstones were introduced these were used in lieu of poles with the name of the person replacing the crest. For a decade or more following the introduction of commercial tombstones native crest designs were drawn by local artists and sent to Victoria stone carvers. Painted pictures were sometimes replaced by written declarations of the value of goods distributed. Widows and widowers of a deceased person were considered ceremonially unclean for one year and had to obey a number of prohibitions. The spouse of the deceased person was not allowed on the river or on the river bank. They were not even to appear at the front door of a house facing the river. If they wish to travel on the ocean, they cannot embark at the village but must go through the woods to a point on the shore and there be picked up by the canoe. There is a regular Widows and Widowers Rock about a mile on either side of every village on the ocean (McIlwraith 1948: 457). Such a location describes almost exactly the Sutlej Point site. Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 37 A˚p p e n d i x R e f e r e n c e s McIlwraith, T 1948, The Bella Coola Indians. University of Toronto Press. Eldridge, Morley and A. Eldridge 1988, The Newcastle Block of Culturally Modified Trees. Report on file, Culture Library, Ministry of Small Business, Tourism and Culture, Victoria. Crompton, Amanda J. 1995, A Study of Sktsa, the Bella Coola National Game. Honours thesis, Department of Archaeology, Simon Fraser University. Hobler, P. M. 2000, The Early Period Site of Tsini Tsini, The 1994. 1995, and 1996 Excavations. Permit report 96-085, Report on file, Culture Library, Ministry of Small Business, Tourism, and Culture, Victoria. Hobler, P. M. and Beth Bedard 1992, Qwliuth and Snxlhh, Prehistory to History in the Bella Coola Valley. permit report, Report on file, Culture Library, Ministry of Small Business, Tourism, and Culture, Victoria. Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 38 Appendix 2 Nusatsum shovel test log Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 39 Appendix 3 Site forms Archaeology Assessment - DL 33, DL 444, Nusatsum January, 2001 Central Coast Heritage - Mr. Philip M. Hobler Page 40