Affinities of Skeletal Material from the Winnipeg River System

Over the past ten years, a series ofburials {n= 1 0) have been salvaged from the banks of the Winnipeg River in eastern Manitoba. These come from the Slave Falls, River Mouth, and Whaley sites. Although direct artifact associations are sparse, nearby sites contain artifacts from the Middle to Late W...

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Veröffentlicht in:Plains anthropologist 1993-02, Vol.38 (142), p.65-78
1. Verfasser: Wyman, Jeffrey M.
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description Over the past ten years, a series ofburials {n= 1 0) have been salvaged from the banks of the Winnipeg River in eastern Manitoba. These come from the Slave Falls, River Mouth, and Whaley sites. Although direct artifact associations are sparse, nearby sites contain artifacts from the Middle to Late Woodland and the contact periods. Comparative canonical analysis of the crania suggests that they can all be assigned to the Saulteauxlndians (Ojibwa). It is suggested that the Winnipeg River sites, both with human remains and without, reflect the activities of the Saulteaux before and during the active period of the historic sites of Fort au bas de Ia Riviere and Fort Alexander
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language eng
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source Periodicals Index Online; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects Algonkian languages
America and Arctic regions
Archaeological sites
Archaeology
Bones
C-scores
Ceramic cultures
Confidence interval
Craniometries
Forensic anthropology
Fur trade
Human remains
Late Woodland
Manitoba
Material culture
Native North Americans
North America
Ojibwa
Prehistory and protohistory
River deltas
Riverbanks
Skull
Woodlands
title Affinities of Skeletal Material from the Winnipeg River System
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