This thesis is based mainly upon field work among the Cree community at Rupert House, Quebec, in the summer of 1961. I have documented the present range in the composition and activity of production and consumption groups and indicated change over the last sixty years. This description is set in the frame of major changes that have occurred in the habitat and the external social environment. The nature of the transitional taiga-tundra biome is delineated. Changes in the manner and extent of its exploitation are described. Certain changes in the plant community have led to the replacement of herd caribou by solitary moose; this in conjunction with new tools has allowed for decrease in the size of trapping-hunting groups. Nevertheless, trapp...
Socioenvironmental changes in Canada’s northern regions are likely to have wide-ranging implications...
This study gives an historical summary of Cree and Chipewyan Indians who resided in the Fort Pitt Di...
This thesis is a result of contemporary ethnographic research among the Southend Reindeer Lake Cree...
This study was undertaken to discover the major factors at work in cultural change and persistence ...
This study was undertaken to discover the major factors at work in cultural change and persistence ...
This study was undertaken to discover the major factors at work in cultural change and persistence ...
Describes changes observed among Chipewyans at Snowdrift in southwestern Mackenzie District in 1960-...
From time immemorial groups of Cree Indians from the interior woodland regions travelled down the lo...
Reports a study in summer 1958 of cultural changes resulting from establishment of a radar base in t...
Fur trapping, for generations the chief source of income for native people in northern Canada, has s...
Fur trapping, for generations the chief source of income for native people in northern Canada, has s...
George River, Quebec, is a small Eskimo community of 151 people located on the southeast side of Ung...
Recent developments in ethnographic research in the Upper Churchill River drainage of northwestern S...
Subsistence, including hunting, sharing the proceeds of the hunt, and the social relations associate...
Socioenvironmental changes in Canada’s northern regions are likely to have wide-ranging implications...
Socioenvironmental changes in Canada’s northern regions are likely to have wide-ranging implications...
This study gives an historical summary of Cree and Chipewyan Indians who resided in the Fort Pitt Di...
This thesis is a result of contemporary ethnographic research among the Southend Reindeer Lake Cree...
This study was undertaken to discover the major factors at work in cultural change and persistence ...
This study was undertaken to discover the major factors at work in cultural change and persistence ...
This study was undertaken to discover the major factors at work in cultural change and persistence ...
Describes changes observed among Chipewyans at Snowdrift in southwestern Mackenzie District in 1960-...
From time immemorial groups of Cree Indians from the interior woodland regions travelled down the lo...
Reports a study in summer 1958 of cultural changes resulting from establishment of a radar base in t...
Fur trapping, for generations the chief source of income for native people in northern Canada, has s...
Fur trapping, for generations the chief source of income for native people in northern Canada, has s...
George River, Quebec, is a small Eskimo community of 151 people located on the southeast side of Ung...
Recent developments in ethnographic research in the Upper Churchill River drainage of northwestern S...
Subsistence, including hunting, sharing the proceeds of the hunt, and the social relations associate...
Socioenvironmental changes in Canada’s northern regions are likely to have wide-ranging implications...
Socioenvironmental changes in Canada’s northern regions are likely to have wide-ranging implications...
This study gives an historical summary of Cree and Chipewyan Indians who resided in the Fort Pitt Di...
This thesis is a result of contemporary ethnographic research among the Southend Reindeer Lake Cree...