The Weapemeoc were an Indian group of the Late Woodland Period through the Early Colonial Period (1400 A.D.-1780 A.D.) that went through significant cultural change as they were displaced from their traditional maritime subsistence resources. The Weapemeoc were located in what is today northeastern North Carolina. Their permanent villages were located along the northern shore of Albemarle Sound, with seasonal and temporary villages on the outer banks and upriver on the several tributaries that drain to the Albemarle Sound. Weapemeoc access to maritime resources would be altered significantly by European colonization and settlement in the area. The loss of maritime subsistence, maritime communication and maritime mentality resulted in the ...
My dissertation analyzes European families who joined Native communities in the seventeenth century ...
A brief, 4-page document on the history of the Passamaquoddy Tribe; a 1977 revision of a document or...
This is a documentation of (1) Ojibwa language loss at Keweenaw Bay from 1600 to 1976, (2) efforts m...
During the 1600s, Algonkian and Wôbanaki peoples in present-day New England and Canada found themsel...
The popular versions of New England\u27s Native American Indian history often contain a gap in repor...
Attachment to place is the core of Rappahannock Indian identity. The Rappahannock\u27s sense of plac...
Indigenous Peoples’ lives, cultures, and values are defined largely by their long-term relationships...
Historical evidence shows that the Albemarle Sound region has a long history of maritime trade. As t...
The shallow post glacial sea of northern Foxe Basin contains a large walrus herd. Complemented by ot...
The Ais were a Native American group who lived along the Atlantic shoreline of Florida south of Cape...
The Ais were a Native American group who lived along the Atlantic shoreline of Florida south of Cape...
The processes of colonialism involve the selective adoption of the foreign along with the recasting ...
This work explores the impact of the “vanishing Indian” paradigm on historical, museological, and an...
Beginning in the mid-seventeenth century, colonial projects in southern New England sponsored dozens...
This thesis is a study of indigenous communities in Southern New England during the seventeenth thro...
My dissertation analyzes European families who joined Native communities in the seventeenth century ...
A brief, 4-page document on the history of the Passamaquoddy Tribe; a 1977 revision of a document or...
This is a documentation of (1) Ojibwa language loss at Keweenaw Bay from 1600 to 1976, (2) efforts m...
During the 1600s, Algonkian and Wôbanaki peoples in present-day New England and Canada found themsel...
The popular versions of New England\u27s Native American Indian history often contain a gap in repor...
Attachment to place is the core of Rappahannock Indian identity. The Rappahannock\u27s sense of plac...
Indigenous Peoples’ lives, cultures, and values are defined largely by their long-term relationships...
Historical evidence shows that the Albemarle Sound region has a long history of maritime trade. As t...
The shallow post glacial sea of northern Foxe Basin contains a large walrus herd. Complemented by ot...
The Ais were a Native American group who lived along the Atlantic shoreline of Florida south of Cape...
The Ais were a Native American group who lived along the Atlantic shoreline of Florida south of Cape...
The processes of colonialism involve the selective adoption of the foreign along with the recasting ...
This work explores the impact of the “vanishing Indian” paradigm on historical, museological, and an...
Beginning in the mid-seventeenth century, colonial projects in southern New England sponsored dozens...
This thesis is a study of indigenous communities in Southern New England during the seventeenth thro...
My dissertation analyzes European families who joined Native communities in the seventeenth century ...
A brief, 4-page document on the history of the Passamaquoddy Tribe; a 1977 revision of a document or...
This is a documentation of (1) Ojibwa language loss at Keweenaw Bay from 1600 to 1976, (2) efforts m...