Grand-Pré, Septembre 4, 2008 –
After undergoing two years of
conservation treatment, the aboiteau found in May 2006 by Robert
Palmeter and Donald Kennie near Grand-Pré National Historic Site is
now in the Visitors’ Centre. Instead of lying in waterlogged clay, it
is resting on trestles for public viewing.
An aboiteau is a long wooden sluice or culvert which
was used by the early Acadians to drain the salt marshes so they could
plant crops. It included a clapper valve that prevented sea water from
flooding the fields at high tide, but allowed fresh water to flow out
at low tide. Normally the aboiteau was placed on the bed of a stream
or creek and was integrated into the wall of a dyke. Like all the
early aboiteaux, the one found at Grand-Pré was made from a hollowed
out log covered on the top with short hand-hewn lathes. The clapper
valve and the lathes were still intact. The aboiteau was accidentally
broken into two sections by a backhoe when it was discovered.
Although a number of aboiteaux have been discovered
over the years in lands once farmed by the Acadians, this is the first
aboiteau that scientists have actually analysed and dated using modern
technology. A recent report published by André Robichaud and Colin
Laroque reveals some amazing findings. Very shortly after the aboiteau
was discovered, André Robichaud took samples of the wood with an
increment borer exactly like the ones foresters use to estimate the
age of living trees. He took core samples from the hollowed out log
that formed the sluice and also from the two intact logs that were
lying parallel to the sluice. The samples were then examined using
scanning electron microscopes at the Dendrochronology Lab at Mount
Allison University.

First of all, Robichaud and Laroque discovered that the
aboiteau was made from a hollowed out white pine tree (Pinus
strobus). In some ways this is surprising since hemlock, cedar and
tamarack are usually considered to be much more resistant to rot.
Since the aboiteau was always going to be waterlogged, the Acadians
obviously knew that pine would survive just as well. And it did!
Cellular analysis indicates that the logs found beside the aboiteau
were either red or black spruce, most likely the former (Picea
rubens).
After establishing what type of wood they were dealing
with, the scientists were then able to carry out experiments in order
to determine when the trees were cut down and how old they were when
they were cut. Although the pine tree was only about a foot wide,
Robichaud and Laroque were able to count 274 growth rings. Their study
shows that the pine tree was cut down in 1686. In other words, the
aboiteau was made from a pine tree that was already at least 80 years
old when Christopher Columbus sailed across the Atlantic! The cut date
of the spruce logs indicates that the spruce tree was felled in 1682.
Based on these cut dates, scientists and archaeologists conclude that
the aboiteau was probably installed by the Acadians not long after
they settled in Grand-Pré. Since it is known that Pierre Melanson and
his wife Marguerite Mius d’Entremont were one of the first families to
move from Port-Royal to Grand-Pré, they may well have participated in
the installation of the aboiteau.
In addition to this aboiteau, the exhibition hall at
Grand-Pré National Historic Site also houses the aboiteau discovered
in1996 at the Melanson Site not far from Annapolis Royal. It is also a
very old aboiteau, although the exact age is not known.
Dykes and aboiteaux constitute a lasting signature of
the Acadians in the maritime landscape. The aboiteau discovered at
Grand-Pré is truly awe-inspiring not only because it is over 300 years
old, but also because the tree from which it was made started its life
around 1412. As Jonathan Fowler, archaeology professor at Saint Mary’s
University, points out, “the Grand-Pré aboiteau is probably the oldest
piece of architectural timber found in Atlantic Canada.”

PHOTOS:
(1) (2) André Robichaud
takes samples of the wood with an increment borer
-
he takes core samples from the hollowed out log that
formed the sluice and also from the two intact logs that were lying
parallel to the sluice. (V. Tétrault)
(3) The Acadian aboiteau found in Grand-Pré dates back
to 1686 and was made from a pine tree that began its life around 1412.
The two sections of the aboiteau are shown here in the Visitors’
Centre at Grand-Pré National Historic Site.
(V. Tétrault)
(4) Archaeology students from Saint Mary’s University
help with the excavation of the aboiteau discovered by chance by a
backhoe operator near Grand-Pré National Historic Site in May 2006.
Sources:
– André Robichaud and Colin Laroque, “Dating the
Grand-Pré Aboiteau with the Use of Dendro-archaeology, ” Mount Allison
Dendrochonology Report 2008-03.
– Jonathan Fowler, “Keeping the Tides at Bay,”
http://www.gov.ns.ca/nsarm/virtual/builtheritage/exhibit.asp?ID=241
– Sally Ross, Dykes and Aboiteaux, bilingual
booklet published by the Société Promotion Grand-Pré, 2002.
For further
information, contact:
Sally Ross
Marketing and
Media Relations
Société
Promotion Grand-Pré
medias@grand-pre.com
The Société
Promotion Grand-Pré is a non-profit organization representing the
Acadian community that collaborates with Parks Canada to ensure the
development and integrity of Grand-Pré National Historic Site.