Hitting the West Coast highlights
By David Wiwchar
Raven's Eye Writer
REVIEW
Since the Time of the Transformers: The Ancient Heritage of the
Nuu-chah-nulth, Ditidaht, and Makah
By Alan D. McMillan
252 pages, $29.95
UBC Press, Vancouver
For the past four decades, the West Coast of British Columbia
and Washington State has been the site of some of the most extensively
studied archaeological sites on the continent.
Archaeologists from around the world have brought their expertise
to places like Yuquot, Ozette, Kiixin, Tsishaa, and Hesquiaht
Harbour, trying to understand how people have survived and thrived
in the rugged landscape.
Among those archaeologists are James Haggarty, Denis St. Claire,
and Alan D. McMillan, who have spent their entire professional
lives exploring the histories, cultures, and linguistics of the
Nuu-chah-nulth, Ditidaht, and Makah nations.
In his latest book from UBC Press, McMillan brings together decades
of archaeological papers, presentations and professional studies
to present a look at the histories of the West Coast peoples
as told through the artifacts found at ancient village locations.
McMillan, an anthropology instructor at Douglas College in New
Westminster, and an adjunct instructor of archaeology at Simon
Fraser University, takes readers through the many excavations
that have taken place along the West Coast, examining in detail
many of the artifacts unearthed, some as many as 5,000 years
old.
The artifacts tell fascinating tales of whaling, hunting, fishing
and gathering, as well as provide a glimpse into the ancient
cultures of the Nuu-chah-nulth, Ditidaht and Makah nations.
Political governance through chieftainship, marriage, the potlatch
and wars are detailed, giving readers an understanding of pre-contact
population dynamics and the incredible wealth held by the Tyee
Ha'wiih (head chiefs) within their Hahoulthee (traditional territory).
Since the Time of the Transformers is not a "complete"
view of the people. It presents the views of archaeologists,
anthropologists and linguists. It is short on the oral histories,
stories, and first-person interviews that really bring "artifacts"
to life, but that is not what this book is supposed to be about.
Since the Time of the Transformers is a compendium of the scientific
work done along the West Coast, written in a style that anyone
can understand and presented in a way that is educational, informative,
and entertaining.
"As is known from archaeological research, the record of
human presence on western Vancouver Island spans at least the
last 4,200 years. From an Indigenous perspective, human history
extends back to mythic times when the transformers, such as Kwatyat
among the central Nuu-chah-nulth, put the landscape and the animals
in the present forms," McMillan writes in his introduction.
Since the Time of the Transformers is an excellent introduction
to the Nuu-chah-nulth, Ditidaht, and Makah nations.