First Nations of Ontario
Available Scans
Birdstone 2
- SCAN #0002
- SCAN DATE 04-28-2023
- SCAN LOCATION Sarnia, Ontario
- ARTIFACT LOCATION Johnston Collection (Port Franks Heritage Museum)
Most birdstones are made of banded slate, especially the greenish-gray banded Huronian variety, but other stones were used as well, including porphyry. Many have projecting eyes or ears. Sizes range from an inch or two to larger examples that are five or six inches in length. A common feature is the presence of bi-conically drilled holes, one at either end of the birdstone’s base.
*The example on the right dates back to the Late Woodland Period (1,500 to 350 years ago) and probably came from southwestern Ontario.
Cultural Insight
The artifacts were a common inclusion in graves and were thought to have ceremonial importance. They first appeared in the middle Archaic period around 5,000 years ago and continued into the early Woodland period to about 2,500 years before present.