By Owen Jaurs, LiveScience
Today New York City is the Big Apple of the Northeast but new research
reveals that 500 years ago, at a time when Europeans were just beginning
to visit the New World, a settlement on the north shore of Lake
Ontario, in Canada, was the biggest, most complex, cosmopolitan place in
the region.
Occupied between roughly A.D. 1500 and 1530, the so-called Mantle site was settled by the Wendat (Huron). Excavations at the site, between 2003 and 2005, have uncovered its 98 longhouses, a palisade of three rows (a fence made of heavy wooden stakes and used for defense) and about 200,000 artifacts. Dozens of examples of art have been unearthed showing haunting human faces and depictions of animals, with analysis ongoing.
Occupied between roughly A.D. 1500 and 1530, the so-called Mantle site was settled by the Wendat (Huron). Excavations at the site, between 2003 and 2005, have uncovered its 98 longhouses, a palisade of three rows (a fence made of heavy wooden stakes and used for defense) and about 200,000 artifacts. Dozens of examples of art have been unearthed showing haunting human faces and depictions of animals, with analysis ongoing.
Now, a scholarly book detailing the discoveries is being prepared and a
documentary about the site called "Curse of the Axe" aired this week on
the History Channel in Canada.
For more: Click Here.
Nothing to do with Melungeons or even Appalachia, but fascinating.
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