Papers of the ... Algonquian Conference, Volume 22Carleton University, 1991 - Algonquian Indians |
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Page 113
... migration must have taken several hundred years in between . Some aspects of this migration hypothesis are supported by the tra- ditional Delaware migration myth reported by the Moravian missionary John Heckewelder . Heckewelder ...
... migration must have taken several hundred years in between . Some aspects of this migration hypothesis are supported by the tra- ditional Delaware migration myth reported by the Moravian missionary John Heckewelder . Heckewelder ...
Page 115
... migration myth summarized above which claims ( point 6 ) that only part of the population crossed the Mississippi . Archaeological evidence of a group remaining west of the ... migration as outlined above . First THE ALGONGUIAN MIGRATION 115.
... migration myth summarized above which claims ( point 6 ) that only part of the population crossed the Mississippi . Archaeological evidence of a group remaining west of the ... migration as outlined above . First THE ALGONGUIAN MIGRATION 115.
Page 116
... migrants set off eastwards and upstream which fits the first part of the migration up the Snake valley to the Continental Divide . Third , this part of the journey ends at a place of snowy mountains , hollow wells , and a frozen body of ...
... migrants set off eastwards and upstream which fits the first part of the migration up the Snake valley to the Continental Divide . Third , this part of the journey ends at a place of snowy mountains , hollow wells , and a frozen body of ...
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Algonquian American animate appear bear called Carleton University century changed clauses communities considered context continue Cree culture derivation described dialects discourse discussion Eastern English European evidence example expressed fact females final French function further give given hoods important Indian indicate individuals influence James Jesuit John Lake land language later linguistic living Maine marriages material means Michif Michigan migration Montagnais narrative Native North noted occur Ojibwa original Ottawa passive patterns person Plains possible Powhatan present Press proximate question records REFERENCES region reported River rule Sauk social Society songs sources speaker stem story stress structure trade traditional tribes University verb vowel Wabanaki Western women York