Ramah Bay is the site of an uncommon semi-translucent light-grey stone with dark banding called Ramah chert. The Ramah chert crops out in a narrow geological bed stretching from Saglek Fiord to Nachvak. At Ramah Bay the highest quality stone, for flaking chipped stone tools, is most readily accessible. Discovered by pioneering Native Americangroups, which archaeologists identify as the Maritime ArchaicCulture, around 7000 years ago, the stone was highly valued for its functional as well as spiritual qualities. Ramah chert was the preferred raw material for the Maritime Archaic Indians and for succeeding populations of Dorset paleoeskimos and by the immediate ancestors of the Innu. Ramah chert was traded as far south as New England and even Chesapeake Bay and west to the Great Lakes which is documented in a report by Stephen Loring.