Papers of the ... Algonquian Conference, Volume 32Carleton University, 2001 - Algonquian Indians |
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Page 278
... boundaries that native peoples were granted annuities , acknowl- edged to have rights to harvest off - reserve resources , and were allotted reserves . Since 1850 , the southern and eastern boundaries of the Robinson Huron Treaty have ...
... boundaries that native peoples were granted annuities , acknowl- edged to have rights to harvest off - reserve resources , and were allotted reserves . Since 1850 , the southern and eastern boundaries of the Robinson Huron Treaty have ...
Page 293
... boundaries of the Robinson Huron 61 Treaty . However , the eastern boundary was still subject to interpretation given the imprecision of where the height of land was located and how a boundary could be delineated from a single ...
... boundaries of the Robinson Huron 61 Treaty . However , the eastern boundary was still subject to interpretation given the imprecision of where the height of land was located and how a boundary could be delineated from a single ...
Page 299
... boundaries are precisely described in metes and bounds , although not sur- veyed . These boundaries , however , completely overlap the Robinson Huron Treaty boundaries south of Lake Nipissing . The legal description of the land included ...
... boundaries are precisely described in metes and bounds , although not sur- veyed . These boundaries , however , completely overlap the Robinson Huron Treaty boundaries south of Lake Nipissing . The legal description of the land included ...
Contents
MARIEODILE JUNKER AND LOUISE BLACKSMITH | 258 |
ED KOENIG | 269 |
JOAN LOVISEK | 278 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Aboriginal Algonquian American Anderson animate appears band boundaries Canada Canadian Carleton University Chief Chippewa claim continue contraction Cree culture derived described Eastern evidence example fact Figure fishery fishing focus focussing four given groups historical hunting important INAN inanimate Indian indicates initial involved Island John John River Journal Lake land language letter lines Linguistics living meaning Mi'kmaq narrative Native North noted nouns object Ojibway Ojibwe Ontario original Ottawa otter particles pattern period Plains population position present Press recorded reference reflection region relations reported River Robinson Saulteaux similar Society stems story structure suffixes suggests territory texts tion Toronto trade traditional Treaty University verb Winnipeg