L'Anse Amour is an archaeological site, located on the Strait of Belle Isle coast in southern Labrador. It was occupied between at least 5500 and 2000 BC by Maritime Archaic aboriginals who used the area for fishing and hunting harp seals and walrus.
The site contains the oldest burial mound found in North America to this day. The mound is about 7500 years old. It has a circular shape and is 8 m in diameter. The mound is covered with large boulders, which protected an empty stone-lined burial. The skeleton of an adolescent child was found underneath. His body was covered with red ochre and accompanied by several stone and bone spearpoints and knives, a walrus tusk, a harpoon head, an ivory carving and a bone whistle. The burial ceremony must have involved at least one week's labour for the local hunting band.
After it was excavated in 1974, the burial mound was restored to its original shape and people can now visit the site. The importance of L'Anse Amour Burial was recognized in 1978, when it was made a National Historic Site.
See also Archaeology; Prehistory.