During the nineteenth century, the Nuu-chah-nulth of Barkley Sound on Vancouver Island were severely reduced by disease, transformed by political amalgamation, and constrained through reserve allocation. Trade waxed and waned in successive fur, logging, and fishing industries. Yet, through these episodic social and economic shifts, the Nuu-chah-nulth continued to use their traditional territories and resources in creative ways. This thesis evaluates ethnohistorical descriptions of material change through an analysis of post-contact contexts at six village sites in Barkley Sound. Although the Nuu-chah-nulth were engaged in trade with Europeans from the 1780s onward, their material culture did not change dramatically until the last decades...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation examines the archaeological data for the t...
This study investigates the prehistoric transition from egalitarian to ranked social structure at Ki...
In the years immediately following the whaling enterprise in Hudson's Bay, the organized Fur Trade e...
This dissertation explores how Nuuchaanulth people living in Port Alberni, British Columbia articula...
This community-based project combined ethnography, history and archaeology to chronicle the life his...
The archaeology of the Moachat Nootka territory, consisting of Nootka Sound and Tahsis and Tlupana I...
Between 1780 and 1810 the Mississauga, a member of the Algonquin speaking family of native groups in...
This dissertation examines multiple scales of Indigenous history on the Northwest Coast from the dis...
Historical evidence shows that the Albemarle Sound region has a long history of maritime trade. As t...
In the mid-19th century, the Fort Vancouver employee Village was one of the most diverse settlements...
This study examines Native-white relations on Vancouver Island, and the creation of the region as a...
Large quantities of artefacts have been recovered from development-based archaeological investigatio...
This study investigates patterns of trade and exchange in pre-contact British Columbia through spati...
This paper examines Nuu-chah-nulth First Nations\u27 traditions of producing bodily adornments and c...
The Chinook of the Lower Columbia River are among the first Natives in the region to have direct con...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation examines the archaeological data for the t...
This study investigates the prehistoric transition from egalitarian to ranked social structure at Ki...
In the years immediately following the whaling enterprise in Hudson's Bay, the organized Fur Trade e...
This dissertation explores how Nuuchaanulth people living in Port Alberni, British Columbia articula...
This community-based project combined ethnography, history and archaeology to chronicle the life his...
The archaeology of the Moachat Nootka territory, consisting of Nootka Sound and Tahsis and Tlupana I...
Between 1780 and 1810 the Mississauga, a member of the Algonquin speaking family of native groups in...
This dissertation examines multiple scales of Indigenous history on the Northwest Coast from the dis...
Historical evidence shows that the Albemarle Sound region has a long history of maritime trade. As t...
In the mid-19th century, the Fort Vancouver employee Village was one of the most diverse settlements...
This study examines Native-white relations on Vancouver Island, and the creation of the region as a...
Large quantities of artefacts have been recovered from development-based archaeological investigatio...
This study investigates patterns of trade and exchange in pre-contact British Columbia through spati...
This paper examines Nuu-chah-nulth First Nations\u27 traditions of producing bodily adornments and c...
The Chinook of the Lower Columbia River are among the first Natives in the region to have direct con...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation examines the archaeological data for the t...
This study investigates the prehistoric transition from egalitarian to ranked social structure at Ki...
In the years immediately following the whaling enterprise in Hudson's Bay, the organized Fur Trade e...