It was heralded as one of Quebec City’s earliest fortifications, but was it?

Jan 21, 2020 | 9:42 AM

MONTREAL — A debate has emerged over an archeological find after an expert suggested that a wooden structure heralded as one of Quebec City’s first fortifications is not nearly as old as claimed.

Archeologists digging in 2018 came across what they described as a 15-metre segment of a wood palisade, built in 1693 by French troops and settlers to protect against attacks from British and Indigenous groups.

But a tree-ring dating expert at Universite Laval who has analyzed two fragments of the wood says his data suggests it is from trees cut down decades later — in 1751 and 1775.

Geography professor Martin Simard says he’s not a historian or archeologist but maintains the wood could not have been used to build something in the 17th century.