In the basement of a research building at Mission San Luis, remnants of dugout canoes sit on shelves, some protected in white boxes.

Thousands of years ago, the canoes would sit on one bank of a waterway or lake, waiting to be rowed across. Canoes were communal, used by the Indigenous people of the time who needed to get from one side to another.

The latest archaeological research shows the oldest dugout canoe the state has in the Florida archives is 8,000 years old. In Tallahassee, the Florida Department of State houses these important artifacts in temperature and humidity-controlled climates. Some are kept in the Division of Historical Resources and others are submerged in preservation tanks in the R.A. Gray Building.

A dugout canoe, approximately 600 years old, in the process of preservation sits in a tank of water in the R.A. Gray Building in Tallahassee.

Canoes were something of a transportation revolution for Native Americans who had neither wheeled vehicles nor pack animals until the arrival of Europeans, Democrat writer and Tallahassee historian Gerald Ensley wrote in 2010.

“I think canoes are a big deal,” retired University of Florida archaeology professor Barbara Purdy said at the time. “They were a way to transport goods and people across waterways when there were no highways. (Ancient Indians) could not have done what they did if not for the fact they manufactured canoes.”

On display in the R.A. Gray Building is a 700-year-old canoe that was discovered in Lake Munson in 2010.

The dugout canoe found in Lake Munson in 2010 is now housed in the R.A. Gray Building in Tallahassee.

Recent headlines focus on Lake Munson as a body of water plagued by pollution. Repeated sewage spills and harmful algae blooms have contaminated the lake over decades. But 14 years ago, the slimy sludge of Lake Munson gave Tallahassee something good to talk about.

“The Lake Munson canoe was rescued after state officials were alerted by a local resident who saw evidence of private citizens trying to remove it from the muck. It is illegal to take artifacts from federal or state land (all navigable waters and their bottoms belong to the state),” wrote Ensley.



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