Posted on 07/16/2011 8:10:01 AM PDT by Daffynition
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (Reuters Life!) - An unfinished Indian canoe, apparently abandoned 500 years ago, has been discovered in a remote section of an Alaska rain forest, according to officials.
The canoe, carved from cedar, was discovered under a thick layer of moss and is surrounded by trees that are several hundred years old, Sealaska Corp., the Alaska Native corporation that owns the land, said in a statement.
The artifact was first spotted last winter by a surveyor checking potential timber-harvest sites, but the discovery was kept confidential until now, the company said.
(Excerpt) Read more at news.yahoo.com ...
That would be the Karta River about 8 miles west, but irrelevant because Kasaan is on the shore of the Pacific Ocean.
And why isn't the canoe TOTALLY filled in with debris??
I know we treated our cedar posts before we put them in the ground.
That was the exact last question asked by the original builders.... That's why it's still there and why it was never finished......
More pics at the link.
Thanks...Wish we had the canoe in perspective.
Not all that long ago an ancient grave was uncovered in Alaska that turned out to have the partially cremated body of an infant. That find turned out to be 11,500 years old. See: http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2011/02/25/archaeologists-11500-year-old-oldest-grave-north-america/
There's currently concern that RICE may have first been cultivated in SW Alaska or maybe the Aleutians, and then taken from there to the Asian mainland.
I know some of this stuff sounds like the Australian finds where EVERYTHING is older there than anywhere else ~ which is like the Russian finds that cut stone and villages are older there than anywhere else.
And so they are!
Aleuts built a village next to Fort Ross in California ~ beating the Mexicans to the place by a good 38 years eh!
Not to mention somebody owes 500 years worth of registration fees for this watercraft.
Very cool find, and smart move on their part to keep the find quiet until it could be properly examined and possibly recovered...
>”...it (Cedar, Western Red) is only good for about 100 years and deterioration begins.”<
You are correct, there is no way this is 500 years old.
You are much further North. Things are different. In any case, Red Cedar ain’t the onliest one. Try this: http://www.na.fs.fed.us/pubs/silvics_manual/volume_1/chamaecyparis/nootkatensis.htm
http://www.na.fs.fed.us/pubs/silvics_manual/volume_1/chamaecyparis/nootkatensis.htm May be a different species called Alaskan Yellow Cedar
Not
Yellow Cedar is not suited for dugout canoes because it does not EVER reach the large diameter required for dugout construction of a vessel 30 to 40 feet and longer. Red Cedar grows to large diameters and is much more easily carved and bends quite well.
The canoes of the Inside Passage were used on salt water (Pacific Ocean)and esturaries, never on fast water and were large and heavy ocean-going vessels that traveled as far south as Puget Sound, and in at least one instance, California.
This example from Canadian Haidas was 63' long.
I think when they uncover the whole thing and really take a good look, they're going to find something much different from what they are advertising. I do not believe it is 500 years old nor that it was made by indigenous people.
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