Dene: British Columbia Heritage Series Our Native Peoples Series 1 Volume 9

The Dene or Athapaskan Indians of British Columbia are only part of a widespread language group. From east to west, the largest continuous habitat of these people extends from the shores of Hudson Bay to the eastern boundary of the Alaska Panhandle. On the north they are found bordering the Arctic E...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: British Columbia Division of Curriculum (Author), British Columbia Provincial Museum (Author), British Columbia Provincial Archives (Author)
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Queen's Printer 1952
Subjects:
Online Access:https://tru.arcabc.ca/islandora/object/tru%3A1900
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spelling ftthompsonrivuni:oai:tru.arca.ca:tru_1900 2024-06-02T08:02:05+00:00 Dene: British Columbia Heritage Series Our Native Peoples Series 1 Volume 9 British Columbia Division of Curriculum (Author) British Columbia Provincial Museum (Author) British Columbia Provincial Archives (Author) 1952 https://tru.arcabc.ca/islandora/object/tru%3A1900 English eng Queen's Printer British Columbia Heritage Series tru:1900 uuid: 26d0faf4-6f98-4fac-8feb-fa981b3cf9a7 https://tru.arcabc.ca/islandora/object/tru%3A1900 Crown copyright has expired publisher Indigenous peoples -- British Columbia Dene booklets Text 1952 ftthompsonrivuni 2024-05-07T02:50:54Z The Dene or Athapaskan Indians of British Columbia are only part of a widespread language group. From east to west, the largest continuous habitat of these people extends from the shores of Hudson Bay to the eastern boundary of the Alaska Panhandle. On the north they are found bordering the Arctic Eskimo, and on the south their boundary dips into Coast Salish territory in the neighbourhood of the 51st parallel of latitude. Other groups of the same language stock that became separated in very early times are to be found along the Pacific Coast in Northern California and the State of Washington, and also in the Southwestern United States, where they are known as Navajos and Apaches. Social Studies Bulletin Department of Education Not peer reviewed Historic booklet Text Arctic eskimo* Hudson Bay Alaska TRUSpace - Thompson Rivers University Arctic Hudson Bay Pacific Hudson
institution Open Polar
collection TRUSpace - Thompson Rivers University
op_collection_id ftthompsonrivuni
language English
topic Indigenous peoples -- British Columbia
Dene
spellingShingle Indigenous peoples -- British Columbia
Dene
Dene: British Columbia Heritage Series Our Native Peoples Series 1 Volume 9
topic_facet Indigenous peoples -- British Columbia
Dene
description The Dene or Athapaskan Indians of British Columbia are only part of a widespread language group. From east to west, the largest continuous habitat of these people extends from the shores of Hudson Bay to the eastern boundary of the Alaska Panhandle. On the north they are found bordering the Arctic Eskimo, and on the south their boundary dips into Coast Salish territory in the neighbourhood of the 51st parallel of latitude. Other groups of the same language stock that became separated in very early times are to be found along the Pacific Coast in Northern California and the State of Washington, and also in the Southwestern United States, where they are known as Navajos and Apaches. Social Studies Bulletin Department of Education Not peer reviewed Historic booklet
author2 British Columbia Division of Curriculum (Author)
British Columbia Provincial Museum (Author)
British Columbia Provincial Archives (Author)
format Text
title Dene: British Columbia Heritage Series Our Native Peoples Series 1 Volume 9
title_short Dene: British Columbia Heritage Series Our Native Peoples Series 1 Volume 9
title_full Dene: British Columbia Heritage Series Our Native Peoples Series 1 Volume 9
title_fullStr Dene: British Columbia Heritage Series Our Native Peoples Series 1 Volume 9
title_full_unstemmed Dene: British Columbia Heritage Series Our Native Peoples Series 1 Volume 9
title_sort dene: british columbia heritage series our native peoples series 1 volume 9
publisher Queen's Printer
publishDate 1952
url https://tru.arcabc.ca/islandora/object/tru%3A1900
geographic Arctic
Hudson Bay
Pacific
Hudson
geographic_facet Arctic
Hudson Bay
Pacific
Hudson
genre Arctic
eskimo*
Hudson Bay
Alaska
genre_facet Arctic
eskimo*
Hudson Bay
Alaska
op_relation British Columbia Heritage Series
tru:1900
uuid: 26d0faf4-6f98-4fac-8feb-fa981b3cf9a7
https://tru.arcabc.ca/islandora/object/tru%3A1900
op_rights Crown copyright has expired
publisher
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