Contain survey of research problems in relation to future northern settlement. Significance of the region to population of the rest of the world, historical patterns of settlement, available resources, and self-sufficiency of future settlements are discussed. Population of Alaska, northern Canada, and Greenland is considered: problems of enumeration, distribution, and permanence of settlement. Frontier settlement research needs and methods are outlined: frontiers in terms of agriculture, mining, land transportation, white-native contact; methods of new settlement by native and non-native
The shallow post glacial sea of northern Foxe Basin contains a large walrus herd. Complemented by ot...
Changing Arctic settlement patterns are associated with shifts in socioeconomic organization and int...
The Rae and Heart Lake regions fall within the Hay River, Upper Mackenzie and northwestern transitio...
Discusses importance of choosing settlement sites which allow for future expansion. Development and ...
Summarizes 1961-1962 field studies of settlements resulting from post-World War II development in th...
Following an introduction on the place of the anthropologist in the study of Eskimo archeology and c...
Notes that the northern Indians and Eskimos in Canada are still poor and depressed despite the money...
The Arctic of North America provides an excellent laboratory for examining human population movement...
Reviews (for Northwest Territories, Yukon, and Alaska) accomplishment in geological mapping; also ne...
Northern Canada was first occupied by man at least 25,000 years ago. The fur trader, the first Europ...
... The problems of northern development are essentially the same regardless of the region involved,...
Contains a brief discussion of archeological research in this area since the first systematic work i...
Indigenous peoples have long been excluded from the management of their homelands and the natural re...
Identifies two types of settlement in the Canadian North, the older centers of transportation, fur-t...
Settlements at the Edge examines the evolution, characteristics, functions and shifting economic bas...
The shallow post glacial sea of northern Foxe Basin contains a large walrus herd. Complemented by ot...
Changing Arctic settlement patterns are associated with shifts in socioeconomic organization and int...
The Rae and Heart Lake regions fall within the Hay River, Upper Mackenzie and northwestern transitio...
Discusses importance of choosing settlement sites which allow for future expansion. Development and ...
Summarizes 1961-1962 field studies of settlements resulting from post-World War II development in th...
Following an introduction on the place of the anthropologist in the study of Eskimo archeology and c...
Notes that the northern Indians and Eskimos in Canada are still poor and depressed despite the money...
The Arctic of North America provides an excellent laboratory for examining human population movement...
Reviews (for Northwest Territories, Yukon, and Alaska) accomplishment in geological mapping; also ne...
Northern Canada was first occupied by man at least 25,000 years ago. The fur trader, the first Europ...
... The problems of northern development are essentially the same regardless of the region involved,...
Contains a brief discussion of archeological research in this area since the first systematic work i...
Indigenous peoples have long been excluded from the management of their homelands and the natural re...
Identifies two types of settlement in the Canadian North, the older centers of transportation, fur-t...
Settlements at the Edge examines the evolution, characteristics, functions and shifting economic bas...
The shallow post glacial sea of northern Foxe Basin contains a large walrus herd. Complemented by ot...
Changing Arctic settlement patterns are associated with shifts in socioeconomic organization and int...
The Rae and Heart Lake regions fall within the Hay River, Upper Mackenzie and northwestern transitio...