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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
Atlas of the North American Indian
Australia's Muslim Cameleers: Pioneers of the Inland 1860s-1930s
BC First Peoples 12: Teacher Resource Guide
Between Race and Nation: The Plains Métis and the Canada-United States Border
Bibliography on Indigenous Rights in Canada, 1995-2022
Exhaustive list (856 pages).
The Birpai of the Manning River and Purfleet Station
Book Reviews
A Brief Overview of the Chronology of North Bothnian Sealing During the Iron Age and a Theory of Punctuated Sedentism
Canada and Arctic North American: An Environmental History
Cartier-Brébeuf National Historic Site of Canada
Castor Resartus: The Beaver Hat in History
Compilation of primary sources, mainly newspaper articles.
The Chouteaus: First Family of the Fur Trade
Colonial Categories and Familial Responses to Treaty and Metis Scrip Policy: The 'Edmonton and District Stragglers,' 1870–88
Commerce by a Frozen Sea: Native Americans and the European Fur Trade
Chapters one and two from the book. Note: Many tables are missing.
Dark Storm Moving West
Eighteenth Century Labrador Inuit in England
Encounters on the Passage: Inuit Meet the Explorers
[Encounters on the Passage: Inuit Meet the Explorers]
Forest Diplomats: The Role of Interpreters in Indian-White Relations on the Early American Frontier
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.
From Berries to Orchards: Tracing the History of Berrying and Economic Transformation Among Lake Superior Ojibwe.
From Tent to Trading Post and Back Again: Smithsonian Anthropology in Nunavut, Nunavik, Nitassinan, and Nunatsiavut - The Changing IPY Agenda, 1882-2007
The Fur Trade at Lachine National Historic Site of Canada
Fur Trade Colonialism: Traders and Cree at Hudson Bay, 1713-67
Grade 4: Alsumsuti Ujit T’an Teli-l’nuimk = To Be Indigenous Is to be Free = Topelomosu Wen Skicinuwit
Content focused on the Mi'kmaq, Wolastoqewiyik, and Passamaquoddy (Peskotomuhkati) peoples of New Brunswick.
Heirs of an Ambivalent Empire : French-Indigenous Relations And the Rise of the Métis in the Hudson Bay Watershed
Historic Archaeology and Ethnohistory at Healy Lake, Alaska
Historical Sociology and Native Americans: Methodological Problems
History of Manawan - Part Two
Home is the Hunter: The James Bay Cree and Their Land
Hummocks: Journeys and Inquiries Among the Canadian Inuit
"I Came to Rite Thare Portraits": Paul Kane's Journal of His Western Travels, 1846-1848
An Indian Account of the Decline and Collapse of Mexico's Hegemony over the Missionized Indians of California
Indian-European Trade Relations in the Lower Saskatchewan River Region to 1840
The Indians and the Heroic Age of New France
Indigenous Ingenuity and the Fur Trade: Lesson Plan
For use with Grades 5-12.
The Industrial Transformation of Subarctic Canada
Introduction
Jean Baptiste Cadotte's First Family: Genealogical Summary
Cadotte (sometimes spelt Cadot) was a prominent figure in the Lake Superior fur trade and married two Ojibwe women, Athanasie and Catherine. These articles focus on the children of Athanasie, also known as Equawaice, part of the Bullhead Catfish clan.
Compilation of three articles which appeared in Michigan's Habitant Heritage in 2020-2021.
Jean Baptiste Cadotte's Second Family: Genealogical Summary
Cadotte (sometimes spelt Cadot) was a prominent figure in the Lake Superior fur trade and married two Ojibwe women, Athanasie and Catherine. These articles focus on the children of Catherine, whom he married in the custom of the country.
Compilation of four articles which appeared in Michigan's Habitant Heritage in 2015-2016.
Related: Jean Baptiste Cadotte's First Family.
Labrador Inuit and Europeans in the Strait of Belle Isle: From the Written Sources to the Archaeological Evidence
The Legend of Thanadelthur: Elders’ Oral History and Hudson’s Bay Company Journals + Thainaltth’er noriya hołts’į, Ëna chu Dene chu ëłehëla nį; Bëghą honį ëritł’is hëla (HBC), ąłnëdhë behonié tth’i łą sį
Examines Dene oral stories to discuss the impact of Thanadelthur to her community and the fur trade.