Dr. Urban conducting a magnetometer survey in Noatak National Preserve in 2017. NPS/Jeff Rasic

Archaeologists working across seven national parks in Alaska have used new technology to find old remains and with great success. Magnetic surveying, in effect a highly sensitive metal detector, has proven successful in locating ancient campfires (or hearths). Intense heat from fires creates a magnetic signature that can last thousands of years and is detectable with the proper equipment with a fairly rapid survey of a likely site. The method, furthermore, allows archaeologists to see beneath the ground and target excavations in precise ways for the least impact to sites and the greatest information gain.



A range of hearth types from very small campfires in open air settings, to cooking places within houses, to large, repeatedly used activity areas were detected and delineated. The hearths in this study represent a variety of cultural traditions spanning a 12,000 year period, and include a 1,000-year-old coastal settlement in Bering Land Bridge National Preserve, a 4,000-year-old caribou hunting camp in Yukon-Charley Rivers National Preserve, and a 300-year-old village site in Kobuk Valley National Park.



Hearth features have incredible information value when it comes to understanding the past since they were focal points of human activity and are typically surrounded by artifacts. Perhaps even more importantly they often still contain well preserved charcoal that with radiocarbon dating provides precision estimates for the age of the site. The oldest hearth found in this study, from Noatak National Preserve in northwestern Alaska, dates to more than 11,000 years ago. Found within this hearth, encrusted with charcoal, was a fragment of a large stone spearpoint, likely used for hunting caribou at the end of the last ice age.