Of men and herds in barrenland prehistory ...

Bibliography: p. 300-317. ... : This thesis represents an attempt at elucidating the temporal and spatial interrelationships between barrenland cultures, climates and caribou herds. Its core is in the form of a case study, that of the pre­historic interaction of the human hunting bands, climatic eff...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gordon, Bryan H. C.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: University of Calgary 1974
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.11575/prism/13495
https://prism.ucalgary.ca/handle/1880/13186
Description
Summary:Bibliography: p. 300-317. ... : This thesis represents an attempt at elucidating the temporal and spatial interrelationships between barrenland cultures, climates and caribou herds. Its core is in the form of a case study, that of the pre­historic interaction of the human hunting bands, climatic effects and caribou herd distributions in the Canadian barrenlands during the Arctic Small Tool tradition occupation after 1500 B.C. Following initial des­criptions of barrenland geography, biology, geology, climatology and ethnology, site locations resulting from the hunter and prey relationship are ex-plored. Basic to this relationship and site locations are two primary suppositions. They are: (1) caribou herds are discrete, their separateness b.?se.d upon environment and behavior; and (2) the hunting soci.eties who prey upori. the caribou tend to be discrete due to their alignment with discrete herds. Three corollaries follow the suppositions: (1) band movements and human communication are usually confined to herd migration corridors and forage ...