Until concrete evidence suggesting its existence was discovered in 1975, biologists typically discounted the idea that a grizzly bear had once roamed northern Quebec. Various reports of brown bears from 1900 to 1950 were written off as
colour morphs of the more common
American black bear.
Early evidence One of the earliest pieces of evidence supporting the existence of a grizzly bear in Labrador is a map of the region drawn in 1550 by French cartographer
Pierre Desceliers, which depicts three bears on the coast. One bear is white and is certainly a
polar bear, while the other two are brown. Fur trappers' reports from local
Moravian mission posts indicate that brown bear pelts were regularly recorded from the 1830s to the 1850s.
Photographic evidence The first photographic evidence of bears in Labrador dates to 1910. American ethnologist and northern explorer William Brooks Cabot made several visits to the Labrador region between 1899 and 1925, studying the
Innu people. While on a canoeing expedition with Innu hunters, Cabot came upon and photographed a bear skull mounted on a pole. Upon examination of this photograph, by comparing it to other bear skulls, Harvard anthropologists Arthur Spiess and Stephen Loring concluded in 2007 that the skull belonged to a small brown bear.
Okak excavation In the summer of 1975,
Harvard anthropologist Steven Cox discovered a small bear skull while excavating an
Inuit midden on Okak Island, near
Okak in Labrador. The specimen consists of a nearly complete
cranium, as well as several
molars. The skull is the property of
Newfoundland and Labrador and is held in the
Provincial Museum of Newfoundland and Labrador. By studying wear on the molars, Cox determined that the skull belonged to a full-grown but small female grizzly bear.
George River In 1910, a skull found east of the
George River at an
Innu camp was photographed and later determined to be a grizzly bear. The discovery of more bear bones in the area is thought to be unlikely, due to the
Innu practice of consuming, utilizing or otherwise disposing of every part of hunted animals. ==Extinction==