Archaeology
Digging
Up Stories | Viking Hare
'Yarn' | Catching Hares
Digging Up Stories
Bones and artefacts excavated from archaeological sites
within the range of Arctic hares (Lepus
arcticus) provide
a wide variety of information about hares and the relationships
between hares and people in the distant past.
An ivory carving of an Arctic hare was excavated from
a Dorset longhouse site on Knud Peninsula, on Ellesmere
Island. The tiny carving is typical of the replicas of
animals that the Dorset people may have offered to animal
spirits to preserve the good relations between hunters
and their prey. These precise sculptures, found in archaeological
sites about 1000 years old, often have markings carved
on them that may represent the animal's skeleton.
Animal bones excavated from a 2500 year-old archaeological
site near Cow Head, Newfoundland, show that Arctic hares
were the third-most common animals used
for food, after
seal and caribou. The people who occupied this site are
known as the Groswater Palaeoeskimo group. The older Dorset
Palaeoeskimo archaeological sites in Newfoundland also
contain bones of Arctic hares.
An archaeological site on Bylot Island, Nunavut, was used
by the well-known Inuit hunter Idlout to illustrate a story
of people who ate only 'rabbits'. Idlout told the story
in 1954 of a group of 'little people', smaller than children,
who used to live on Bylot Island. He described the site
at Canada Point, where there was a whole camp of little
tent rings with only 'rabbit' bones in them.
Viking Hare 'Yarn'
A three-metre length of cordage spun from the fur of
Arctic hare was found in a Dorset Palaeo-Eskimo site on
Baffin Island (in Nunavut) from about 1200 AD (some 800
years ago). It may indicate a Norse presence in this region
because it is comparable to the yarns found in two textile
fragments from a medieval Norse settlement in Greenland.
Yarn is typical of Viking/Norse culture, unlike Inuit,
who used skins rather than yarn for clothing.
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