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History buffs unhappy with resumption of construction on possible downtown Montreal Indian burial site

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   Some Coolopolis readers are not happy that the construction of a 27-storey skyscraper - delayed as crews searched for archaeological treasures - has resumed.
   Ivanhoe-Cambridge shut down the Manuvie House construction site at 900 de Maisonneuve W. - the old Simpson's parking lot -  in mid-February but announced Monday, about five weeks later, that they hadn't found anything.
   The builders noted that they had hired a archaeological specialist firm, although the name of that company wasn't mentioned in a press release.
   They note that the construction site is also outside of designated archeological zones, according to a provincial Culture Ministry map.
   Montreal residents Ian Barrett and Robert J. Galbraith have responded with a not, accusing the builders of only digging five 10-inch test holes and not looking in the right way.
   "There are old accounts of children and private collectors picking up arrowheads and stone axes exactly on this site. And now IC says there is nothing left there of the original sites. But much of the site was never built on, because the area went from Indian land to forest to farmers fields, then to 19th-century greystones on big lots with spacious gardens and lawns, and then finally covered over with parking lots. Very significantly, in 2010 and 2014 Indian artifacts were even found during sewer work right alongside the site. There is no doubt about it; this is a promising area," they wrote.
   "It is important to understand that the evidence left behind in an Indian city in Canada is usually very subtle. They did not leave behind stone foundations and most of what we find are small and scattered indications of life. A piece of pottery here, an arrowhead over there. You’re not finding big strata of debris. Most of their lifestyle was organic and has disappeared. So of course, a few test holes are unlikely to produce results. A broader investigation is essential."
   The note also describes Hochelaga as "one of the greatest, most legendary lost cities in the world."

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