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Lucy Islands

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Lucy Islands
Map
Geography
LocationChatham Sound
Coordinates54°18′01″N 130°37′08″W / 54.30028°N 130.61889°W / 54.30028; -130.61889
Administration
Canada

Lucy Islands are a small archipelago off the North Coast of the province of British Columbia in Canada.[1]

The low-lying, and heavily forested (Sitka Spruce) islands, named after its largest island Lucy Island, are a provincially-protected conservancy area that contain some of the North Coast’s oldest archeological sites, a nationally-significant seabird population, and a prominent 20th Century lighthouse. [2]

Location

The Lucy Islands Conservancy is an archipelago located about 15 km west of the North Coast’s largest city, the port of Prince Rupert. The archipelago lies in the middle of Chatham Sound, north of the juncture with Hecate Strait, and between the much-larger Melville Island and Digby Island.

Human habitation

Ancient shell middens and house depressions on the islands are an indicator of human occupation dating back possibly 5,000 years.[3] Some of the oldest archaeological sites on the North Coast are located on the islands[2], including the earliest-known use of a rectangular house in the region.[3]

Traditionally, the Lucy Islands are included in the territory of the Gitwilgyoots, a Tsimshian-speaking tribe that wintered in the Prince Rupert area at the time of European contact. In late spring, during the seasonal round, the Gitwilgyoots moved to the outer islands west of Prince Rupert for a period of marine fishing, shellfish gathering and sea mammal hunting before returning to the Skeena River in early summer for the salmon runs.[3]

In the winter of 1984/5, strong winds felled two trees above a shell midden and exposed ancient human remains of a child, a young adult female and an older male. With the approval of the Metlakatla First Nation, the remains were analysed by the Canadian Museum of Civilization. A genetic study published in PLOS ONE in 2013 linked the 5,500-year-old female remains to 2,500-year-old remains found on nearby Dodge Island. The groundbreaking study, the first to use new techniques to analyse the complete mitochondrial genome, also found that a living Tsimshian woman from the Metlakatla First Nation near Prince Rupert had a direct DNA link (maternal ancestry) to the 5,500-year-old female from Lucy Islands. The study’s findings may indicate an enduring occupation of the geographical region by local First Nations. [4]

By the 20th Century, the sole residents of Lucy Islands were lighthouse keepers. A light above their residence was later replaced by a tower built in 1903 on the east point of the main island. The Canadian Coast Guard destaffed the lighthouse in 1988.[5]

Protected area

In 2008, the provincial government established the new Lucy Islands Conservancy under the Protected Areas of British Columbia Act. It protects critical seabird nesting habitat and supports contemporary marine food harvesting as well as popular recreation opportunities.[2]

The conservancy protects the 28 hectares of land throughout the archipelago as well as 178 hectares of foreshore out to 200 metres from the natural boundary of the sea. [6]

The Conservancy is collaboratively managed by BC Parks with the Metlakatla and Lax Kw’alaams First Nations. The partnership replaced a rotten and hazardous boardwalk to permit recreational visits while protecting archaeological and bird-nesting features.[2]

Seabirds

The islands are home to a significant avian population.

The conservancy is a nationally significant breeding site for Rhinoceros Auklets, that dig long underground burrows where they make their nests.[2] Lucy Islands is the sixth-largest colony in the province. The 25,300 nesting pairs (1983) also represent about 5.4% of the global population.[5]

Pigeon Guillemots, Glaucous-winged Gulls and Black Oystercatchers have also been recorded at the site.[5]

References

  1. ^ "Lucy Island". BC Geographical Names. Province of British Columbia. Retrieved 7 July 2013.
  2. ^ a b c d e BC Parks: Annual Report 2010/11 (PDF). BC Parks. 2011. Retrieved 6 July 2013.
  3. ^ a b c Cui Y (2013). "Ancient DNA Analysis of Mid-Holocene Individuals from the Northwest Coast of North America Reveals Different Evolutionary Paths for Mitogenomes". PLoS One. Retrieved 6 July 2013. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  4. ^ Boswell, Randy (5 July 2013). "Breakthrough DNA study links B.C. woman and 5,500-year-old "grandmother"". Vancouver Sun. Retrieved 6 July 2013.
  5. ^ a b c "Lucy Islands". Canadian Important Bird Areas. Retrieved 6 July 2013.
  6. ^ "Protected Areas of British Columbia Act - Schedule E". Queen's Printer, British Columbia. Retrieved 6 July 2013.