Ottawa

Amateur archeologists invited to dig up Moore Farm Estate

The National Capital Commission is inviting adults and children dig up and sift through the soil where a cottage burned down 60 years ago on the Moore Farm Estate in Gatineau.

The National Capital Commission is holding a series of digs as part of Quebec's 'archeology month'

Adults and children alike are digging through the soil of a cottage that burned down 60 years ago as part of a public archeology program that's operating for the first time in the Moore Farm Estate in Gatineau.

After one day of digging Monday, people found blacksmith-forged nails, medicine bottles, ceramics and even a rare porcelain bowl, according to National Capital Commission archeologist Ian Badgley.

"It's a 1930s specimen because it doesn't say Japan, it says Nippon," Badgley said, holding the pieces of the broken bowl together. "This was really a rare piece of porcelain coming in from a distant place."

The NCC holds archeological digs on its lands during Quebec's "archeology month." This is the first time this has happened at Moore Farm Estate, located on Alexandre-Taché Boulevard east of the Champlain Bridge.

The century-old estate had several uses, including an equestrian track, before it was donated to the NCC 1973. Badgley said the archeological dig will contribute to reviving the historic memory of the land, which only reopened to the public under a new operator in June.

This week's dig is focused on the foundation of the Broadview Cottage, which burned down in 1956.

Bringing people into archeology

Among the most enthusiastic amateurs was eight-year-old Liam Berezowsky. He called out the objects he found as his father filtered through the soil from their square plot.

It's an enthusiasm that's familiar to Badgley, who has worked as an archeologist for almost 50 years.

National Capital Commission archeologist Ian Badgley runs the dig at the Moore Farm Estate and is gathering artifacts for workshops on interpreting their meaning in the fall. (CBC)

"When you find something that somebody else has handled or somebody else has made, you're actually touching that person. You become involved in their cognition," Badgley said. "Artifacts are solutions to problems, if you will. Be it an axe to cut wood or a pencil to write."

Children under the age of 10 can dig in special plots that have some treasures planted for them to find—finger puppets, old coins and plastic dinosaurs that they can take home. They are also welcome to take part in the historic dig with parental supervision—but they can't take what they find home.

Instead people who participate in the dig will be invited to help catalogue and interpret their findings in the fall, Badgley said.

"This is the final goal not just to let them dig but to bring them into the whole archeological process, from beginning to end."

The NCC estimates more than 100 people participated in the dig on Monday. About 30 people are signed up for the morning session on Tuesday and another 30 for the afternoon session. The NCC says people can join in the dig even if they haven't registered.