North Caribou Lake Archaeology: Northwestern Ontario

Field work in the summer of 1981 at North Caribou Lake, at the headwaters of the Severn River drainage, yielded 23 sites. Excavation and testing of ten produced Laurel, Blackduck, late prehistoric, 19th century Fur Trade and 20th century material. To date, this represents the most northerly expressi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gordon, Lynn Diana
Other Authors: Noble, William C., Anthropology
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11375/12098
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spelling ftmcmaster:oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/12098 2023-05-15T18:19:14+02:00 North Caribou Lake Archaeology: Northwestern Ontario Gordon, Lynn Diana Noble, William C. Anthropology 2012-06-11 http://hdl.handle.net/11375/12098 unknown opendissertations/7011 8056 2977771 http://hdl.handle.net/11375/12098 Anthropology thesis 2012 ftmcmaster 2022-03-22T21:11:22Z Field work in the summer of 1981 at North Caribou Lake, at the headwaters of the Severn River drainage, yielded 23 sites. Excavation and testing of ten produced Laurel, Blackduck, late prehistoric, 19th century Fur Trade and 20th century material. To date, this represents the most northerly expression of Laurel and Blackduck cultures in northwestern Ontario. The ethno-archaeological focus of this project, combining archaeological, archival, ethnographic and informant data, allowed for a clear understanding of the native use of the lake over the past one hundred years, including some important determinants of boreal forest settlement patterns. These determinants appear to have remained relatively stable from Middle Woodland times to the present. Observation of modern seasonal patterns of occupation has aided in the interpretation of the culture history of North Caribou Lake. Master of Arts (MA) Thesis Severn River MacSphere (McMaster University) North Caribou Lake ENVELOPE(-132.719,-132.719,68.100,68.100) Severn River ENVELOPE(-87.600,-87.600,56.034,56.034)
institution Open Polar
collection MacSphere (McMaster University)
op_collection_id ftmcmaster
language unknown
topic Anthropology
spellingShingle Anthropology
Gordon, Lynn Diana
North Caribou Lake Archaeology: Northwestern Ontario
topic_facet Anthropology
description Field work in the summer of 1981 at North Caribou Lake, at the headwaters of the Severn River drainage, yielded 23 sites. Excavation and testing of ten produced Laurel, Blackduck, late prehistoric, 19th century Fur Trade and 20th century material. To date, this represents the most northerly expression of Laurel and Blackduck cultures in northwestern Ontario. The ethno-archaeological focus of this project, combining archaeological, archival, ethnographic and informant data, allowed for a clear understanding of the native use of the lake over the past one hundred years, including some important determinants of boreal forest settlement patterns. These determinants appear to have remained relatively stable from Middle Woodland times to the present. Observation of modern seasonal patterns of occupation has aided in the interpretation of the culture history of North Caribou Lake. Master of Arts (MA)
author2 Noble, William C.
Anthropology
format Thesis
author Gordon, Lynn Diana
author_facet Gordon, Lynn Diana
author_sort Gordon, Lynn Diana
title North Caribou Lake Archaeology: Northwestern Ontario
title_short North Caribou Lake Archaeology: Northwestern Ontario
title_full North Caribou Lake Archaeology: Northwestern Ontario
title_fullStr North Caribou Lake Archaeology: Northwestern Ontario
title_full_unstemmed North Caribou Lake Archaeology: Northwestern Ontario
title_sort north caribou lake archaeology: northwestern ontario
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/11375/12098
long_lat ENVELOPE(-132.719,-132.719,68.100,68.100)
ENVELOPE(-87.600,-87.600,56.034,56.034)
geographic North Caribou Lake
Severn River
geographic_facet North Caribou Lake
Severn River
genre Severn River
genre_facet Severn River
op_relation opendissertations/7011
8056
2977771
http://hdl.handle.net/11375/12098
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