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Lab number
SFU-144
Material dated
charcoal; charbon de bois
Locality
north side of Artifact Valley, at confluence of Wet Creek and Braided River, Mount Edziza, Stikine drainage, British Columbia
Map sheet
104 G/07
Date uploaded
February 14, 2020
Normalized Age
0 ± 0
δ13C (per mil)
-25.0
Significance
culture?
Context
hearth feature, 5-10 cm depth
Comments
HiTp-1, Wet Creek: "House 1" is interpreted as a natural depression, intensively occupied by people, but not a constructed feature as was initially assumed. SFU-143 overlay the main cultural level and is interpreted as a minimum age limit on the main occupation. SFU-141 was directly associated with numerous flakes and a large biface fragment and is considered an accurate estimate of the age of the main cultural occupation in this area. Area 2 is the main eastern block excavation at the Wet Creek site. SFU-142 was a single large clean-looking, well-preserved lump of wood charcoal, and field observations note that it is "probably intrusive" by slump or frost cracking. SFU-262 consisted of a small cluster of charcoal flecks near the top of the cultural horizon. Both dates are considered to be minimum estimates for the Area 2 assemblage. The two samples represented the only organic remains found in the area. SFU-145 is from a shallowly buried charcoal-lens hearth that produced a large number of biface thinning flakes, one heavily worn basalt biface, an end-scraper, and some small fragments of calcined bones, possibly ground squirrel. It demonstrates the presence of native occupation during the latter cool phase of the Neoglacial. SFU-144 is from a prehistoric feature, and the modern date must reflect recent contamination.

References