Manitoba

New resources help Indigenous communities start process of searching for unmarked graves

A group of archaeologists and academics has created free online resources answering questions about how to start searching for unmarked graves and explaining the process and the complexities. They say it's a way of empowering First Nations communities.

Concerns persist that companies without the right technology or expertise may take advantage of communities

A woman with brown hair and glasses stands in a field.
Kisha Supernant and her colleagues at the Canadian Archaeological Association have created free online resources to answer questions they've been fielding from Indigenous groups since the discovery in Kamloops. (John Ulan//University of Alberta)

WARNING: This story contains details some readers may find distressing.


Experts familiar with the complexities of searching for unmarked graves are being deluged with questions from First Nations communities wondering how to start the emotional process at former residential school sites.

There's also concern some Indigenous groups may be taken advantage of by companies offering to survey land for them without the proper expertise or technology.

That's why a group of archaeologists and academics have created free online resources answering questions and explaining the process and the complexities. They say it's a way of empowering communities to make decisions based on information they can trust.

"Some communities are prepared to move quickly and we want to ensure that this information is available to them, also available to any companies who are considering doing this work," said Kisha Supernant, director of the Institute of Prairie and Indigenous Archaeology and associate professor in the University of Alberta's anthropology department.

Supernant and her colleagues are getting questions ranging from how ground-penetrating radar (GPR) works and how to decide which company to hire, to what permits are required and the best way to honour the sites.

They created a video and FAQ, which was posted on the Canadian Archaeological Association's site on Saturday.

Supernant said it's especially important because she has already heard of companies and individuals "taking advantage of the tragic circumstances" at the former Kamloops Indian Residential School by contacting Indigenous leaders and offering to help them find unmarked graves.

"My concern with some of the companies saying, 'We're ready to come out tomorrow' is that those companies may not have the internal expertise around finding graves," she said.

"They may know how to use the technology, but the application of that technology to unmarked graves is quite specialized. And most large engineering companies or geophysical companies have likely never attempted to use this to find graves."

The resource guide initiative is being applauded by First Nations leaders and companies doing this work.

WATCH | Indigenous communities start process of searching for unmarked graves:

Other First Nations aim to locate unmarked graves after Kamloops, B.C., discovery

3 years ago
Duration 2:04

Long Plain First Nation Chief Dennis Meeches has already had GPR work done on parts of the former Portage la Prairie Residential School site west of Winnipeg, but says there is much more land to survey.

He said the CAA resources will be "very helpful "for leaders trying to make decisions about proceeding.

"There's got to be more research done," he said.

"There's a lot of concern that there is the possibility unmarked graves do exist at that site. So we need to be really sure and comfortable, knowing that we've done our best to to look at it and to bring some closure to it."

'Do not cause any more trauma'

Ever since news of the Kamloops discovery broke, Craig Campbell of G3Tech in Saskatoon has been getting phone calls from people asking for a weekend course on how to use the ground-penetrating radar (GPR).

"I know exactly what it's for," Campbell said.

"Companies getting ahold of me that just purchased a piece of equipment last month and they want to go and start gathering [GPR data on potential] grave sites. And I'm just advising them against it to stay away from it. Do not cause any more trauma."

Jordan Swenson, a ground-penetrating radar technician with Saskatoon-based G3Tech, uses GPS to place pink stakes at all the potential burial locations identified by ground-penetrating radar on the Beardy's and Okemasis's Cree Nation in October 2019. They identified almost 50 potential burials. (Craig Campbell/G3Tech)

It's easy to collect the wrong information and interpret the data incorrectly, he said.

"You can't just go rent this [equipment] and go decide to be a GPR surveyor. It's like getting a knife and thinking you're going to be a surgeon," Campbell said.

Will Meredith, an archeological geophysicist and GPR specialist for a Vancouver-based company called GeoScan, agreed. He said searching for unmarked graves decades old is very different from finding underground pipes or cables.

"We don't want kind of any misinformation that could cause any further pain or upset," Meredith said, adding it's not a 'show up and do' kind of job.

Adam Czecholinski, a technician from Vancouver-based GeoScan, conducts a magnetometry survey in B.C. This, plus an electromagnetic conductivity survey, are usually done in addition to using ground-penetrating radar, to produce more accurate results of what lies beneath the ground. (Courtesy GeoScan)

A lot of historical research is required and land use permits must be obtained before anyone comes to survey the area. The more accurately an archeologist or the community can pinpoint a site, the more efficient and cost effective it will be,  he said. 

A site survey will also determine the right technology to use — it may be different for a boggy area compared to one that is heavily forested. GeoScan typically uses electromagnetic conductivity and magnetometry in addition to GPR.

"You can't just blindly go out there and just start surveying for them. It's like looking for a needle in the haystack," Meredith said.

A profile view image from a ground-penetrating radar survey showing reflections produced by known graves. The two upside down U shapes are subsurface reflections from a material that differs from the native soil - in this case, metallic coffins, which is why they are so clear. When the coffins are of different material or there is no coffin at all, it is more complex to identify the burial sites. Each profile is subsequently analyzed, with analysts looking for 'cut marks,' spots where the native soil has been disturbed from the process of digging a grave and then being put back again. (GeoScan)

Supernant knows there is urgency and momentum for some communities in finally starting this work, especially with news the federal government will distribute $27 milllion to help communities locate and identify children who never returned from residential schools.

Alberta has also committed funding to research undocumented sites.

Still, Supernant said it's important not to make rushed decisions and crucial to ensure survivors and their families are supported, "that ceremony is incorporated in the appropriate ways and that all of the different nations whose children have attended any given school have the opportunity to come together and decide upon their own process."

WARNING: This story contains details some readers may find distressing. In the days after The Tk'emlúps te Secwépemc First Nation said the remains of 215 children were found during a preliminary scan at the site of a former residential school in Kamloops, B.C., Indigenous communities across Canada have asked for similar searches at suspected sites in their territories. Three Indigenous women reflect on the importance of accounting for all the children who died at residential schools and Kisha Supernant, a Métis archeologist at the University of Alberta, explains how she uses ground-penetrating radar to help Indigenous communities carry out the work.

Support is available for anyone affected by their experience at residential schools, and those who are triggered by the latest reports.

A national Indian Residential School Crisis Line has been set up to provide support for former students and those affected. People can access emotional and crisis referral services by calling the 24-hour national crisis line: 1-866-925-4419.

Corrections

  • A cutline in a previous version of this story mistakenly referred to the GeoScan image from ground-penetrating radar survey as a plan view. In fact, it is a profile view.
    Jun 14, 2021 10:40 AM CT

Add some “good” to your morning and evening.

Start the day smarter. Get the CBC News Morning Brief, the essential news you need delivered to your inbox.

...

The next issue of CBC News Morning Brief will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in the Subscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.