Students spend summer digging up, preserving 300-year-old human remains
LOUISBOURG, N.S. — Young researchers are working against the clock to dig up 300-year-old human remains before they’re washed away by the sea — and the project lead says what they found so far could give us a new perspective on what life was like in the 18th century.
Experts have said there could be as many as a thousand bodies buried at Rochefort Point, the main burial site at Cape Breton’s Fortress of Louisbourg, once a popular seaport and the site of two sieges between the French and the British in the 1700s.
The narrow peninsula extending into the ocean just beyond the fortress’s east gate is now under a siege of its own: rising sea levels and coastal erosion pose a distant threat to the centuries of history buried beneath its surface, said Parks Canada spokesman David Ebert.
“As we face climate change and we have bigger storms that have gotten more energy, that can accelerate the erosion problem,” he said in a phone interview.

