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- Title
SETTLEMENT AND LAND USE PATTERNS IN THE HUDSON BAY LOWLANDS OF NORTHERN ONTARIO, CANADA.
- Authors
PILON, Jean-Luc
- Abstract
The lower Severn River has been occupied, at the very least, for the past 1500 to 2000 years. The archaeological remains left behind are modest and consist quite often of hearth features surrounded by faunal remains and lithic debris from tool manufacture. Ceramics, while known were not a significant component of the material culture of the region's inhabitants. An annual cycle existed over most of this time span which was focused on the seasonal movements of caribou, giving the people of the Hudson Bay Lowlands a distinct adaptive pattern when compared to their neighbours in northern Manitoba and Québec.
- Subjects
HUDSON Bay; CANADA; LAND settlement patterns; ALGONQUIANS (North American peoples); LAND use; HUDSON'S Bay Co.; ETHNOLOGY; ARCHAEOLOGICAL research; CARIBOU habitat; HISTORY; CORPORATE history; NATIVE American history
- Publication
Revista de Arqueología Americana, 2013, Issue 31, p7
- ISSN
0188-3631
- Publication type
Article