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Subsistence and Culture in the Western Canadian Arctic: A Multicontextual Approach

$34.95

By Matthew W. Betts

This book chronicles the relationship between developing Siglit economic strategies and shifts in technology, settlement strategies, demography and climate, exposing in the process the primary link between Siglit culture and their subsistence practices.

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Subsistence and Culture in the Western Canadian Arctic: A Multicontextual Approach
By Matthew W. Betts

September 2008, ISBN 978-0-660-19803-3
Mercury Series, Archaeology Paper 169
312 pp., 38 illustrations, 17 x 24 cm, paperback

The Siglit, or Mackenzie Inuit, the ancestors of the modern Inuvialuit, were, at the time of Euroamerican contact, the most populous and complex Inuit society in the Canadian Arctic. Through innovative analysis of animal bones recovered from their ancient archaeological sites, this comprehensive study documents the complex relationships between the Mackenzie Inuit and their food animals, and tracks these connections over some 800 years, from their earliest occupations to the arrival of Europeans in the 19th century.

Methodological in focus, this study examines the way in which archaeologists integrate animal remains into their analyses and proposes a systematic methodology for evaluating faunal data against other archaeological information. This volume chronicles the relationship between developing Siglit economic strategies and shifts in technology, settlement strategies, demography and climate, exposing in the process the primary link between Siglit culture and their subsistence practices.

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