 Taber Hill
Taber Hill also spelled 
Tabor Hill is an Iroquois burial mound in Toronto, Ontario. It is located near Lawrence Avenue and Bellamy Road in Scarborough. The cemetery was discovered on August 17, 1956 when a steam shovel
 was in the process of demolishing the 60 foot high hill. The soil was 
being transported for use in construction an overpass for Highway 401 and the cleared site was then intended to be turned into a suburban subdivision.
After digging some one hundred feet into the hill the workers found a large collection of human bones. The ossuary
 was eventually found to be about fifty feet long, seven feet wide, and 
one foot deep. An estimated 472 individuals are believed to have been 
buried there. The burial dates to about 1250 CE.
 
The provincial government
 expropriated the site, exchanging it for land elsewhere in the area. It
 was proclaimed a cemetery and has since been administered by the city. 
At the top of the mound is a memorial with a historical plaque on one 
side and a prayer written by an Iroquois leader on the other. While 
designated a cemetery, there have been concerns that the area is often 
used as a park. Tobogganing is an especially popular activity on the steep hill.