Thomas D'Arcy McGee
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Lucky find gives archaeologists glimpse into early hunting technology in Yukon
Copper end blade, found in 2016, was recently dated at 936 years old
By Mike Rudyk, CBC News Posted: Jan 13, 2018 11:00 AM CT Last Updated: Jan 13, 2018 11:00 AM CT
Yukon archeologist Greg Hare says it was just luck that led him in 2016 to find a nearly 1,000-year-old hunting artifact, half exposed in a remote patch of ice.
Recent radiocarbon dating confirms that the arrow blade point is one of the earliest examples of copper metallurgy ever found in Yukon.
Hare was travelling with a documentary film crew over the ice patches near Carcross, Yukon, in July 2016 when they spotted some caribou on a hillside. Hare had been showing the crew some of sites where he and other archaeologists have been finding ancient First Nations hunting weapons over the last 20 years.
They were flying in two helicopters, and Hare's helicopter decided to land to get out of the film crew's shot. While waiting on the ice patch, Hare and his team spotted an antler arrow point half buried in the ice. It looked like it had just been fired from a bow.




















































