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  1. George Silas Creed was born on May 27, 1829, in Lockhartville, Kings, Nova Scotia. He was a postmaster living in South Rawdon, Nova Scotia. A few Mi'kmaq carvings found on the shores of Kejimkujik Lake, Nova Scotia in 1873 and documented by Joseph More sparked his keen interest in Mi'kmaq culture and inspired him to visit the site.

  2. Sep 14, 2016 · The Kejimkujik petroglyphs were pecked, scratched, or cut into the fine-grained slates of stone along the eastern Nova Scotian shoreline using stone or metal tools. [13] Mi’kmaw petroglyphs of Nova Scotia have been uniquely documented through the tracings of George Creed done in 1887 and 1888. [14] The tracing’s completed by Creed are the ...

  3. Kejimkujik National Park and National Historic Site is located in southwestern Nova Scotia. More than 500 petroglyphs have been found on four different sites around Kejimkujik Lake and George Lake. These carvings created on slate mainly document Mi’kmaq lifestyle between the 17th and 19th centuries. Kejimkujik is situated on the traditional territory of this Indigenous nation.

  4. Mi’kmaw petroglyphs and their stories. The Merrymakedge petroglyph site is one of four on the shores of Kejimkujik Lake and George Lake, but it’s the only one open to the public by way of the guided tour. When water levels are high, the petroglyphs are hidden. About a five-minute walk through the woods from the monument is a seating area ...

    • Wildlife
    • History
    • Present Day

    The wildlife is diverse. The park's marshes, bogs and shallow lakes support more species of reptiles and amphibians than occur anywhere else in Atlantic Canada, including rarities like the ribbon snake and Blanding's turtle. The woods are home to mammals common to Eastern Canada, such as black bears, minks, flying squirrels and red foxes. A pristin...

    The area's first inhabitants, the Mi'kmaq, left hundreds of petroglyphs (see Pictographs and Petroglyphs) depicting legends and events on the slate outcrops of Kejimkujik Lake. The waterways linking the Atlantic Ocean and the Bay of Fundy provided the Mi'kmaqand French with a major canoe route, and the park is still a canoeist's paradise. Scottish ...

    Today, the Kejimkujik National Park and National Historic Site offers a variety of recreational opportunities, such as canoeing, kayaking, hiking, biking, and camping. The site continues to be known for its natural and cultural heritage and its seaside views. The park also continues to be a site for research, with continued ecological restoration p...

  5. George Creed, Postmaster at South Rawdon, Hants County, traced several hundred of the over 2000 petroglyphs at Fairy Lake (Kejimkujik) and McGowan Lake in the late 1880's. A petroglyph or rock drawing is almost a form of Mi'kmaq daily life, carving into stone what they saw, what they did, what they wore, hunting and fishing trips, their legends, etc.

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  7. George Creed, postmaster at Rawdon, N.S., traced many of the Mi'kmaq petroglyphs now located within the boundaries of Kejimkujik National Park, and at McGowan Lake, N. S. He examined the rock faces, went over those outlines he thought significant with a coloured pencil, then pressed dampened paper over the tracing; thus his images are reversed.

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