Discovery of 5,200-Year-Old Canoe Reveals Ancient Travel Traditions in Eastern North America

November 19, 2025
Discovery of 5,200-Year-Old Canoe Reveals Ancient Travel Traditions in Eastern North America
  • Initial findings in 2021 showed a 1,200-year-old canoe, with older canoes—dated at 3,000 and 4,500 years, and then 2,000 years—revealing a long history of lake travel and reuse.

  • The 5,200-year-old canoe is one of the oldest in the region, with two older canoes found in Florida.

  • Researchers have identified and mapped 16 ancient canoes submerged in Lake Mendota, Madison, suggesting a prehistoric ‘parking lot’ where Indigenous people left canoes for reuse along travel routes.

  • The project emphasizes Indigenous collaboration and cultural significance, with tribal preservation officers highlighting the enduring connection between Indigenous communities and these waters.

  • Lake Mendota sits within a broader landscape that includes Lake Wingra and Ho-Chunk ancestral lands, with spiritual importance tied to local springs and waters.

  • The project began in 2021 with the discovery of a 1,200-year-old canoe, followed by finds of progressively older canoes (up to 4,500 years old), suggesting multiple layers of use at the lake site.

  • As discoveries continued from 2021 onward, researchers documented canoes dating as old as 4,500 years, prompting the expectation that many more rests lie at the lake bed.

  • Radiocarbon dating places the oldest canoe at about 5,200 years old, making it the third oldest canoe found in eastern North America and indicating a long tradition of lake-based travel in the region.

  • The dating of 16 canoes places the oldest at roughly 5,200 years, underscoring the canoe-travel tradition across eastern North America and its complex prehistoric use of lake habitats.

Summary based on 7 sources


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