Nunavut archaeological sites threatened by climate change may be saved thanks to new high-tech equipment, says the territory's director of culture and heritage.

Archaeologist Brooke Milne, shown here excavating at a site near Igloolik in 2003, says the University of Manitoba and the University of Waterloo plan to collaborate on a plan to stabilize threatened heritage sites in the North. Archaeologist Brooke Milne, shown here excavating at a site near Igloolik in 2003, says the University of Manitoba and the University of Waterloo plan to collaborate on a plan to stabilize threatened heritage sites in the North. (Submitted by Brooke Milne)

Doug Stenton said new 3D technology and a ground-penetrating radar system can be used to quickly map the surface and sub-surface, and could be used to deal with sites affected by coastal erosion and melting permafrost.

The University of Manitoba has received funding to buy the technology and plans to use it in the Arctic.

"It will help us identify areas that need special attention...and help us plan strategies to protect the site, [such as] stabilization methods," Stenton said.

He added that there are about 12,000 documented sites in Nunavut, dating back as many as 4,500 years. Discoveries can include stone tools, clothing, bone and stone carvings, and masks.

As an example of a threatened site, Stenton pointed to photos of a site containing artifacts from the Tuniit or Dorset people, who predate the Inuit. A large section of the site near Pond Inlet, Nunavut, has washed into the ocean.

"This is one example of the kind of erosion that we see at the sites and the kinds of things that we're going to have to probably pay more attention to as a consequence of climate change, global warming and melting of permafrost."

New to eastern Arctic

Brooke Milne, a professor of archaeology at the University of Manitoba, received money from the Canada Foundation for Innovation to buy the new equipment, which she said has never been used in the eastern Arctic.

"It will allow us to define the overall extent of the site in a digital capacity without necessarily having to excavate it the same way that we traditionally would have had to do to get the same kind of information," she said.

The technology will also help to find sites in areas of the sub-Arctic where there is more vegetation.

One piece of equipment is a laser measuring microscope that can digitize artifacts, allowing researchers to preserve an artifact without physically having it.

The archaeologists hope to team up with the engineering department at the University of Waterloo to develop a strategy to stabilize threatened sites.

Stenton says other circumpolar countries are in the process of identifying rich heritage sites that are at risk because of the changing climate.

The technology will be purchased in 2011 and researchers hope to put it to use in Nunavut in 2012.