Describes the seasonal activities and movements of Indians around Lake Mistassini, Quebec (51 N, 73 30 W), on the basis of 13 months' field work in 1953-54. Their fur-trapping, hunting and fishing economy and the climatic conditions necessitate periodic changes in occupation and habitation. Eight such periods are distinguished: summer, fall travel, fall hunt, winter camp construction, early winter trapping, late winter hunt, spring trapping, and spring travel. These periods, implicit (though not explicit) in Mistassini discussion of their activities, conform only in part to the six climatic seasons recognized by the Indians
ABSTRACT. Indigenous peoples possess knowledge about wildlife that dates back many generations. Inui...
Caribou (Rangifer tarandus) are the common thread running through thousands of years of cultural evo...
Research over the past several decades on the nature of Inuit hunting of narwhals has focused upon ...
Describes changes observed among Chipewyans at Snowdrift in southwestern Mackenzie District in 1960-...
ethnographic field work among the Mistassini Cree of south-central Quebec. During the course of this...
T HE importance of trapping to the Indians of the Canadian Arctic and Subarctic is a matter of histo...
Reports on Cree Indian lodges as observed in an area northeast of Lake Mistassini in 1953. Remains o...
In 1769 an Order in Council from the British government enabled the Moravians to settle in Labrador....
Determining site seasonality in the eastern Canadian Subarctic is crucial to the interpretation of s...
The Kutchin lived in the subarctic forests in the area along the arctic circle from the McKenzie Riv...
At the northern edge of their North American range, moose (Alces alces) occupy treeline and shrub tu...
Contains an account of the biological nature of the mammals and their relationship to the local Eski...
From time immemorial groups of Cree Indians from the interior woodland regions travelled down the lo...
ABSTRACT. Many descriptions of lifestyles in the western subarctic region have been built on the pre...
The central objective of this research was to determine if there is a relationship between long-term...
ABSTRACT. Indigenous peoples possess knowledge about wildlife that dates back many generations. Inui...
Caribou (Rangifer tarandus) are the common thread running through thousands of years of cultural evo...
Research over the past several decades on the nature of Inuit hunting of narwhals has focused upon ...
Describes changes observed among Chipewyans at Snowdrift in southwestern Mackenzie District in 1960-...
ethnographic field work among the Mistassini Cree of south-central Quebec. During the course of this...
T HE importance of trapping to the Indians of the Canadian Arctic and Subarctic is a matter of histo...
Reports on Cree Indian lodges as observed in an area northeast of Lake Mistassini in 1953. Remains o...
In 1769 an Order in Council from the British government enabled the Moravians to settle in Labrador....
Determining site seasonality in the eastern Canadian Subarctic is crucial to the interpretation of s...
The Kutchin lived in the subarctic forests in the area along the arctic circle from the McKenzie Riv...
At the northern edge of their North American range, moose (Alces alces) occupy treeline and shrub tu...
Contains an account of the biological nature of the mammals and their relationship to the local Eski...
From time immemorial groups of Cree Indians from the interior woodland regions travelled down the lo...
ABSTRACT. Many descriptions of lifestyles in the western subarctic region have been built on the pre...
The central objective of this research was to determine if there is a relationship between long-term...
ABSTRACT. Indigenous peoples possess knowledge about wildlife that dates back many generations. Inui...
Caribou (Rangifer tarandus) are the common thread running through thousands of years of cultural evo...
Research over the past several decades on the nature of Inuit hunting of narwhals has focused upon ...