Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Archeological Survey Says No Indigenous Artifacts At Montreal Office Tower Sitec

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Mar, 2015 11:16 AM

    MONTREAL — Construction has resumed at the site of a Montreal office tower after an archeological survey put to rest any concerns there were indigenous artifacts in the ground below.

    Ivanhoe Cambridge stopped excavation work in mid-February after citizen concerns the site might contain artifacts linked to the Dawson archeological site, remnants of an ancient Iroquois village discovered in 1859.

    The real-estate arm of Quebec's pension fund manager, the Caisse de depot et placement, said in a statement Monday a survey has given it the all-clear to continue building the 27-storey Maison Manuvie office tower.

    Ivanhoe commissioned the study despite having proper permits that said the project was outside any designated archeological zones.

    The Dawson excavation site is considered a potential site of the Iroquois village of Hochelaga as described by Jacques Cartier during his second trip in 1535. The village near Mount Royal was located in present-day Montreal, although its exact location remains unknown.

    The Dawson site has historical resonance for many, said Andre Costopoulos, a McGill University anthropology professor.

    "It (the Dawson site) was clearly an important residential site, a large village site that was probably occupied for a long period of time," Costopoulos said. "The finds that were made there are still quite important in understanding what happened in the St-Lawrence Valley in late pre-history."

    The chances of finding Hochelaga are fairly remote.

    "The more development on the island, the fewer candidate sites remain undisturbed," Costopoulos said.

    The survey, conducted by the firm Archeotec, said the soils were stripped during road and infrastructure construction in the 19th and 20th, leaving little to unearth.

    "In particular, the surface soils that could conceal archaeological elements connected to site are clearly not there," the firm said. 

    Robert Galbraith, a freelance photographer who sounded the alarm, said he's not surprised by the results, but believes better care should be taken given the increase in construction.

    "If we took for granted every time we built in a sensitive area of heritage concern, we would never have anything left," Galbraith said.

    The office tower will house Manulife (TSX: MFC) employees following that company's $4-billion acquisition of Standard Life Canada last September.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadian reported in custody in drowning of boy, 4, at St. Lucia beach

    Canadian reported in custody in drowning of boy, 4, at St. Lucia beach
    VIEUX FORT, Saint Lucia — A man reported to be Canadian is in custody in connection with the drowning of a young boy at a beach in Vieux Fort, St. Lucia.

    Canadian reported in custody in drowning of boy, 4, at St. Lucia beach

    PM and Bill Gates discuss keeping maternal and child health a world priority

    PM and Bill Gates discuss keeping maternal and child health a world priority
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Stephen Harper and billionaire philanthropist Bill Gates are urging the world to keep the issue of maternal, newborn and child health as a development priority.

    PM and Bill Gates discuss keeping maternal and child health a world priority

    Devil in the details at roundtable on murdered, missing aboriginal women

    Devil in the details at roundtable on murdered, missing aboriginal women
    OTTAWA — Getting Canada's Aboriginal Peoples, the provinces and territories and the federal government to gather together in the same room is no small feat.

    Devil in the details at roundtable on murdered, missing aboriginal women

    Scouts Canada volunteer from Regina faces sex-related charges

    Scouts Canada volunteer from Regina faces sex-related charges
    REGINA — A Regina man who volunteered with Scouts Canada as well as with church groups is facing sex-related charges involving teenagers.

    Scouts Canada volunteer from Regina faces sex-related charges

    Cause of fire that killed 2 children on Saskatchewan reserve unknown: officials

    Cause of fire that killed 2 children on Saskatchewan reserve unknown: officials
    LOON LAKE, Sask. — Fire officials say they don't know what caused the blaze that killed two children on a northern Saskatchewan reserve last week.

    Cause of fire that killed 2 children on Saskatchewan reserve unknown: officials

    B.C. man accused in terror case wanted to be armed for Canada Day attack: trial

    B.C. man accused in terror case wanted to be armed for Canada Day attack: trial
    VANCOUVER — A B.C. man accused in a terrorism case appears in surveillance videos to be anxious to be armed with a gun for an alleged Canada Day attack at the provincial legislature.

    B.C. man accused in terror case wanted to be armed for Canada Day attack: trial