Underwater Archaeology Across Canada

by Charles Moore

Though it may surprise some in Ontario, Alberta has many submerged shipwrecks. These include any number of small craft, various western lake steamers such as the Gertrude in Waterton Lake, and even a prototype for an aircraft carrier! I may return to these sites in a future article, but, continuing the theme begun last issue of underwater sites that are not shipwrecks, we also find a couple of sites of this type in Alberta.

Lake Minnewanka in Banff National Park is a natural lake, but one that has had its level raised three times by dams. Twice the town of Minnewanka was forced to move because of the changes in water level. The last dam was built by the Calgary Power Company in 1941-2, with the stated goal of providing hydro-electricity to assist arms manufacture. The town was not rebuilt finally after the water level reached a maximum flood level of 4,840 ft., nearly 100 feet higher than the original level.




Chimney collapsed into basement of house (G. Slater)


Today, the lake remains popular with boaters and also with divers who particularly enjoy diving down to the impressive concrete structure of the dam built in 1912. The top of the dam is in about 40 feet of water, while the bottom of the rocky canyon it spans is deeper than 90 feet. Divers can also visit a submerged bridge, four wharves, several surviving house foundations and cellars, a well, sidewalk, and other town features. Scattered items like kitchen stoves, bedsprings, pots and pails are other terrestrial vestiges of life on the former lake shore in the first half of this century. All in all, it is a unique diving experience.




Part of Dam built in 1912 (M. A. Bernier)


Unfortunately, all diving experiences in the Lake have not been happy ones. One diver has lost his life on the dam. A much less serious but more persistent problem for local Parks staff is the congestion caused by divers sometimes numbering in the hundreds on a summer weekend who obstruct the causeway and beach with their vehicles and equipment. The principal problem from our particular perspective is the vandalism the underwater structures, the dam in particular, have routinely been subjected to. Graffiti is found everywhere, even carved into the concrete face of the dam. The dam had also been "decorated" with a bizarre selection of objects including propane bottles, bath tubs, road signs, plastic pink flamingoes, plastic daisies, plaques of dubious commemorative value, and even a toilet that had been carefully riveted in to one of the spillways.




Side scan sonar image of dam (R. Chang)


Though sometimes the effort to install these "improvements" was very great, volunteers have tried to match these efforts in cleaning the site up as best they could without further damaging the structures. The encouraging news is that for the last couple of years the volunteers have had very little to clean up. Underwater Archaeological Services (that's us -- another name change) visited the lake in 1990 and 1992. Joining the unit's archaeologists were veteran volunteer divers from Calgary, Lorie Hedemark, Mark Gibeau, Wally Romanchuck, and Park Warden, Gregg Slatter. These divers not only greatly lengthened the teams' daily bottom time but brought with them priceless local diving experience, not to mention an extra boat. Sites were located, inventoried, and mapped. Video and photo records were taken. Side-scan sonar helped us locate new features of the site and was also a valuable tool in assembling the overall site plan.

In 1994, three archaeologists from our unit again returned to Lake Minnewanka, this time looking for a different kind of submerged cultural resource. On the current shore of Lake Minnewanka, a prehistoric site has been discovered, dating to about 9,000 years B.P. Other similar sites might exist underwater. Predictive models suggested some potential site locations on the edge of the old lake and banks of the stream which drained it. We endeavoured to test these hypotheses by coring in a number of likely areas. Mark and Lorie joined us again, as did another diving warden, Blair Fyten, and "terrestrial" archaeologist from Parks Alberta Region, Bill Perry. What Bill looked for in our cores was a diagnostic lens of red soil which is characteristic of paleo-indian sites in the area. Sure enough, in one of the cores he found it.

I hope to return in the fall of this year to Banff National Park with one or two others from the Underwater Archaeology Services, this time to excavate where we recovered our promising core. As interesting as this potential prehistoric site may be, I look forward to involving more volunteers in our work there. I take it as a given that as more divers are exposed to underwater heritage fewer will be tempted to plant new pink flamingoes.




On beautiful Lake Minnewanka as divers get ready to descend with coring device (Calgary Herald)


The Banff National Park staff is also now considering more concrete methods to safeguard their resources. One option is to have divers register before diving on the site. Upon registering divers would receive a pamphlet describing what they can see underwater in Lake Minnewanka, and also the benefits of leaving the underwater cultural resources of all sorts unharmed. Park staff is also trying to secure funds for a video which would be a more effective means of delivering the same message. The registration requirement may seem onerous to some divers, but the park is prepared to give back to the diving community. An access trail has been provided specially for divers. and, with set-up capital provided by the Alberta Scuba Diver's Association, mooring and marker buoys safeguarding both the resources and divers will be maintained. Descriptive billboards might be erected on shore displaying historic and current underwater photos juxtaposed that will be of interest not only to divers but also to the thousands of non-diving tourists who visit the lake but have no idea what lies beneath its waves.

If the benefits for all become apparent to the diving community at large, we hope a core of local divers will join a "Friends of Lake Minnewanka" organization based on the model of the Friends of Fathom Five. If there is sufficient interest we may offer a NAS Level 1 course there this fall as a kick-start to such an organization. Lorie and Mark had the chance to get trained as NAS assistant tutors last year in Vancouver, and they will be more than welcome as fellow-instructors if they wish to join us. Besides continuing the hopefully diminishing tasks of site cleanup, a "Friends of" organization could also undertake site monitoring, and the more creative and entertaining challenges of setting up underwater trails and information plaques. It is our hope that, by involving local divers and parks staff in our short-term heritage-related activities, there will be long-term spin-off benefits resulting not only in more protected cultural resources, but also more fulfilling park experiences for the diving and non-diving public.


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