From time immemorial groups of Cree Indians from the interior woodland regions travelled down the lowland rivers to the coast of James Bay every spring. They came to feast on fresh geese and to socialize with others who also came to intercept the migrating flocks. The Indians travelled down the rivers as families or groups of families, while the inland regions they left behind held shared hunting areas rather than carefully defined and defended individual or group hunting lands. Thus they were generally peaceful people, establishing kinship and friendship networks throughout the James Bay region. They lived simply with few material goods. A wigwam suited the housing needs of their nomadic lifestyle. They spent the goose hunting seasons near...
Fur trapping, for generations the chief source of income for native people in northern Canada, has s...
This thesis was completed and submitted at Nipissing University, and is made freely accessible throu...
This article examines the understanding of Cree hunters in relation to shifts in landscape resources...
Reports a study in summer 1958 of cultural changes resulting from establishment of a radar base in t...
In the 18th century the Indigenous peoples of the James Bay region shared land near the coast, a few...
This thesis is based mainly upon field work among the Cree community at Rupert House, Quebec, in the...
On the cold, desolate, wind-swept shore of Hudson Bay, winters were long and there was nothing but b...
This thesis, based on my ethnographic research in Moose Factory, Ontario documents the history of Mo...
During the centuries before the white man's arrival in British Columbia, the native peoples, be...
ABSTRACT. Domestic or subsistence fisheries of the eastern James Bay Cree. were studied, mainly in F...
The economic plight of Indians and Eskimos in the Hudson-James Bay area is partly dependent on the n...
This article examines the understanding of Cree hunters in relation to shifts in landscape resources...
This study gives an historical summary of Cree and Chipewyan Indians who resided in the Fort Pitt Di...
This manuscript re-examines the history of the fur trade in the eastern subarctic and Mackenzie lowl...
This manuscript re-examines the history of the fur trade in the eastern subarctic and Mackenzie lowl...
Fur trapping, for generations the chief source of income for native people in northern Canada, has s...
This thesis was completed and submitted at Nipissing University, and is made freely accessible throu...
This article examines the understanding of Cree hunters in relation to shifts in landscape resources...
Reports a study in summer 1958 of cultural changes resulting from establishment of a radar base in t...
In the 18th century the Indigenous peoples of the James Bay region shared land near the coast, a few...
This thesis is based mainly upon field work among the Cree community at Rupert House, Quebec, in the...
On the cold, desolate, wind-swept shore of Hudson Bay, winters were long and there was nothing but b...
This thesis, based on my ethnographic research in Moose Factory, Ontario documents the history of Mo...
During the centuries before the white man's arrival in British Columbia, the native peoples, be...
ABSTRACT. Domestic or subsistence fisheries of the eastern James Bay Cree. were studied, mainly in F...
The economic plight of Indians and Eskimos in the Hudson-James Bay area is partly dependent on the n...
This article examines the understanding of Cree hunters in relation to shifts in landscape resources...
This study gives an historical summary of Cree and Chipewyan Indians who resided in the Fort Pitt Di...
This manuscript re-examines the history of the fur trade in the eastern subarctic and Mackenzie lowl...
This manuscript re-examines the history of the fur trade in the eastern subarctic and Mackenzie lowl...
Fur trapping, for generations the chief source of income for native people in northern Canada, has s...
This thesis was completed and submitted at Nipissing University, and is made freely accessible throu...
This article examines the understanding of Cree hunters in relation to shifts in landscape resources...