All objects come from Early, Middle, and Late Dorset sites in Nunavut and Labrador. This does not include material from Nunavik (Northern Quebec) or Greenland. For the harpoon heads and knife handles, all objects are bladed (as opposed to self-bladed) with complete blade slots. Metal tools are from the Franklin Pierce site on Ellesmere Island. At the time of data collection, the material sampled were housed at the Rooms Museum (St. John’s Canada), Canadian Museum of History (Gatineau, Canada), and the Prince of Wales Northern Heritage Centre (Yellowknife, Canada). The material itself was originally excavated from a number of sites across the Canadian Arctic in Labrador and Nunavut over decades of fieldwork by numerous archaeologists. These...
Osseous tools are often recovered from coastal archaeological sites in Alaska due to favorable prese...
International audienceBone tools from Tayara (KbFk-7, Nunavik) revisited by a technological study Ta...
Archaeological research on the Canadian island of Newfoundland increasingly demonstrates that the is...
Arctic archaeologists generally accept that Dorset Paleo-Inuit (Tuniit) (c. 800 BC-1300 AD) toolkits...
Around AD 500 Palaeo-Inuit groups, known archaeologically as the Late Dorset, resettled parts of the...
The territory in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago known to have been occupied by the Dorset people ha...
Harpoons are an essential part of the hunting toolkit amongst Inuit and have been integral to the ma...
Harpoons are an essential part of the hunting toolkit amongst Inuit and have been integral to the ma...
Around AD 500 Palaeo-Inuit groups, known archaeologically as the Late Dorset, resettled parts of the...
Portable, composite tool kits have been essential to the prehistoric dispersals of people around the...
The Stock Cove site at Newfoundland holds evidence for every culture that has lived on the island da...
This dataset consists of files that can be used to view a high-resolution 3D model of a box-type str...
... Harpoons have a wide distribution throughout the world, but it is among the Inuit that the most ...
Permafrost-preserved materials from two Saqqaq sites (ca. 3900-2600 BP) in Disko Bay, West Greenland...
ABSTRACT. This paper reports on an unusual archaeological feature discovered at the Cadfael site (Ni...
Osseous tools are often recovered from coastal archaeological sites in Alaska due to favorable prese...
International audienceBone tools from Tayara (KbFk-7, Nunavik) revisited by a technological study Ta...
Archaeological research on the Canadian island of Newfoundland increasingly demonstrates that the is...
Arctic archaeologists generally accept that Dorset Paleo-Inuit (Tuniit) (c. 800 BC-1300 AD) toolkits...
Around AD 500 Palaeo-Inuit groups, known archaeologically as the Late Dorset, resettled parts of the...
The territory in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago known to have been occupied by the Dorset people ha...
Harpoons are an essential part of the hunting toolkit amongst Inuit and have been integral to the ma...
Harpoons are an essential part of the hunting toolkit amongst Inuit and have been integral to the ma...
Around AD 500 Palaeo-Inuit groups, known archaeologically as the Late Dorset, resettled parts of the...
Portable, composite tool kits have been essential to the prehistoric dispersals of people around the...
The Stock Cove site at Newfoundland holds evidence for every culture that has lived on the island da...
This dataset consists of files that can be used to view a high-resolution 3D model of a box-type str...
... Harpoons have a wide distribution throughout the world, but it is among the Inuit that the most ...
Permafrost-preserved materials from two Saqqaq sites (ca. 3900-2600 BP) in Disko Bay, West Greenland...
ABSTRACT. This paper reports on an unusual archaeological feature discovered at the Cadfael site (Ni...
Osseous tools are often recovered from coastal archaeological sites in Alaska due to favorable prese...
International audienceBone tools from Tayara (KbFk-7, Nunavik) revisited by a technological study Ta...
Archaeological research on the Canadian island of Newfoundland increasingly demonstrates that the is...