Heritage Festival

July 23 to July 31, 2010

ARCHAEOLOGY
Overview
Terminology
Maritime Archaic Indian
Groswater Palaeoeskimo
Dorset Palaeoeskimo
Recent Indian
Early European Explorers
TOURS
Overview
Archaeology/Culture
Nature/Adventure
INTERPRETATION CENTRE
Time Line Exhibit
Laboratory
Museum
Craft shop
PROGRAMS
Learning Travel Programs
Community Memories Project
The Patron Program
Big Droke Cultures Foundation
Remains To Be Seen

An incredible, unforgettable experience awaits you in Bird Cove, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada. If the scenery…the learning travel adventures...the exhibits… or the archaeological excavations... don’t win you over, the people sure will!

Polar Bear Effigy

For over 5,000 years the Great Northern Peninsula on the island of Newfoundland has been providing rich resources from the land and sea for diverse groups of people. In Bird Cove, we haveunearthed woodworking and hunting tools once used by the Maritime Archaic Indians 4500-3500years ago; gouges, notched and stemmed projectile points, lances and bayonets, bifaces, whetstones, axes, adzes and blades.

Prehistoric occupants of the Bird Cove area came to utilize many natural resources, such as seals, caribou, fish, whales, birds, walrus, and plants.Similarly, Early European cultures, such as the Basque, English, French, and Irish came to the Northern Peninsula initially for the fish and whales. Many of these early European peoples would eventually come to settle in this area and learn to call it home. A few historic excavations have been carried out, such as at Meany’s Point, to shed light on lucrative historic finds. As one hikes along the trails and shorelines of the close by Dog Peninsula, it is not unusual to find early European artifacts. There is much work to be done!

Just as prehistoric peoples and our European ancestors depended on the rich local resources of the land and sea, so too, have the people of Bird Cove and surrounding communities. In an ironic twist, because the present day fishing industry is failing the local inhabitants, it is the discovery and promotion of the extinct cultures that is providing a resource on which the community will build its future. The efforts of the Big Droke Foundation are completely community driven, and with the assistance of several funding agencies and the concerted cooperation of many local and regional development groups, it is expected that it will become the model for community run archaeological projects in the future.

MAPS
How To Get Here
Trail System
A PHOTO GALLERY
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OTHER ITEMS
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Archaeological Excavation Red Sky at Night, Sailor's Delight Harebell Mating Season