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An Agent of Change: William Drewry and Land Surveying in British Columbia, 1887-1929
American Indians and the Santa Fe Trail
Includes annotated bibliography of fifteen hundred primary and secondary sources and spread sheets of interactions with information about date, place, participants, numbers injured, type of encounter, significance and source.
Arc of the Medicine Line: Mapping the World's Longest Undefended Border Across the Western Plains
Arctic Spectacles: The Frozen North in Visual Culture, 1818-1875
Atlas of Canada 6th Edition (archival version): Aboriginal Peoples circa 1823
Australia's Muslim Cameleers: Pioneers of the Inland 1860s-1930s
Book Reviews
Canada and Arctic North American: An Environmental History
Cartier-Brébeuf National Historic Site of Canada
Changing Times
Overview of Métis history from the 1840s to 1875. Discusses the collapse of the buffalo hunting economy, the establishment of the community of St. Laurent, passing of laws to establish order, and the arrival of the North West Mounted Police.
Includes questions for students.
The Chouteaus: First Family of the Fur Trade
Commerce by a Frozen Sea: Native Americans and the European Fur Trade
Chapters one and two from the book. Note: Many tables are missing.
The Concept of the Good Indian: An Albany River 19th Century Managerial Perspective
Contact Languages at the Northern Territory British Military Settlements 1824-1849
Contrasting Worlds
Overview of Métis history from the 1600s to the early 1870s when many Métis migrated from Manitoba to Saskatchewan. Includes questions for students.
2nd edition.
Dark Storm Moving West
Determining the Availability of Traditional Wild Plant Foods: An Example of Nuxalk Foods, Bella Coola, British Columbia
The Dissolution of a Métis Community: Pointe à Grouette, 1860-1885
Eighteenth Century Labrador Inuit in England
Encounters on the Passage: Inuit Meet the Explorers
[Encounters on the Passage: Inuit Meet the Explorers]
The Forks National Historic Site of Canada
Forts, Curriculum, and Indigenous Métissage: Imagining Decolonization of Aboriginal-Canadian Relations in Educational Contexts
Argues that the fort is a significant mythic symbol that reinforces colonial divides that continue to affect Aboriginal-Canada relations.