Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Beothuk

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Historical Indigenous people of Newfoundland
This article is about the ethnic group. For their language, seeBeothuk language.
Part of a series on
Indigenous peoples
in Canada
Indigenous North Americas
flagCanada portal

Newfoundland, the historic home of the Beothuk

TheBeothuk (/bˈɒtək/ or/ˈb.əθʊk/; also spelledBeothuck)[1][2] were a group ofIndigenous people of Canada who lived on the island ofNewfoundland.[3]

The Beothuk culture formed around 1500 CE. This may have been the most recent cultural manifestation of peoples who first migrated fromLabrador to present-day Newfoundland around 1 CE. The ancestors of this group had three earlier cultural phases, each lasting approximately 500 years.[4]

Description

[edit]

The Beothuk lived throughout the island of Newfoundland, mostly in theNotre Dame andBonavista Bay areas. Estimates of the Beothuk population at the time of contact with Europeans vary. Historian of the Beothuk Ingeborg Marshall argued that European historical records of Beothuk history are clouded byethnocentrism and unreliable.[5] Scholars from the 19th and early 20th century estimated about 2,000 Beothuk individuals lived at the time of European contact in the 15th century;[citation needed] however, there may have been no more than 500 to 700 people.[6] Based on the carrying capacity of the ecosystem at the time of contact the population is estimated to have been between 1,000 and 1,500.[7] They lived in independent, self-sufficient, extended family groups of 30 to 55 people.[8][7]

Like many otherhunter-gatherers, they appear to have had band leaders but probably not more formal chiefs, in the anthropological definition of the word. They lived in conical dwellings known asmamateeks, which were fortified for the winter season.[7] These were constructed by arranging poles in a circle, tying them at the top, and covering them with birch bark. The floors were dug with hollows used for sleeping. A fireplace was made at the centre.

During spring, the Beothuk usedred ochre to paint not only their bodies but also their houses,canoes, weapons, household appliances, and musical instruments. This practice led Europeans to refer to them as "Red Indians".[9][7] The use of ochre had great cultural significance. The decorating was done during an annual multi-day spring celebration. It designated tribal identity; for example, decorating newborn children was a way to welcome them into the tribe. Forbidding a person to wear ochre was a form of punishment.

Their main food werecaribou,salmon, andseals, augmented by harvesting other animal and plant species. The Beothuk followed the seasonal migratory habits of their principal quarry. In the fall, they set up deer fences, sometimes 48–64 km (30–40 mi) long, used to drive migrating caribou toward waiting hunters armed with bows and arrows.[10]

The Beothuk are also known to havemade a pudding out of tree sap[citation needed] and the dried yolk of the eggs of thegreat auk.[11] Theypreserved surplus food for use during winter, trapped various fur-bearing animals, and worked their skins for warm clothing. The fur side was worn next to the skin, to trap air against a person's body.

Beothuk canoes were made of caribou or seal skin, and the bows of canoes were stiffened with spruce bark. Canoes resembledkayaks and were said to be 4.6 m (15 ft) in length and 0.76 m (2+12 ft) in width with enough room to carry children, dogs, and property.[12]

The Beothuk followed elaborate burial practices. After wrapping the bodies in birch bark, they buried the dead in isolated locations. In one form, a shallow grave was covered with a rock pile. At other times they laid the body on ascaffold, or placed it in a burial box, with the knees folded. The survivors placed offerings at burial sites to accompany the dead, such as figurines, pendants, and replicas of tools.[10]

European exploration

[edit]
Tribal territory of Beothuk

About 1000 CE,Norse explorers led byLeif Erikson encountered Indigenous people in northern Newfoundland, who may have been ancestors of the later Beothuk, orDorset inhabitants of Labrador and Newfoundland. The Norse called themskrælingjar ("skraelings").[13] Beginning in 1497, with the arrival of the Italian explorerJohn Cabot, sailing under the auspices ofKing Henry VII, waves of European explorers and settlers had more contacts.

Unlike some other Indigenous groups, the Beothuk tried to avoid contact with Europeans;[14] they moved inland as European settlements grew. The Beothuk visited their former camps only to pick up metal objects. They would also collect any tools, shelters, and building materials left by the European fishermen who had dried and cured their catch before taking it to Europe at the end of the season.[14] Contact between Europeans and the Beothuk was usually negative for one side, with a few exceptions likeJohn Guy's party in 1612. Settlers and the Beothuk competed for natural resources, such as salmon, seals, and birds. In the interior, fur trappers established traplines, disrupted the caribou hunts, and ransacked Beothuk stores, camps, and supplies. The Beothuk would steal traps to reuse the metals, and steal from the homes and shelters of European settlers and sometimes ambush them.[15] These encounters led to enmity and mutual violence.[16] With superior arms technology, the settlers generally had the upper hand in hunting and warfare. (Unlike otherNative American peoples, the Beothuk appeared to have had no interest in adopting firearms.)[17]

Intermittently, Europeans attempted to improve relations with the Beothuk. Examples included expeditions by naval lieutenantsGeorge Cartwright in 1768 andDavid Buchan in 1811. Cartwright's expedition was commissioned by Governor Hugh Palliser; he found no Beothuk, but brought back important cultural information.

Governor John Duckworth commissioned Buchan's expedition. Although undertaken for information gathering, this expedition ended in violence. Buchan's party encountered several Beothuk nearBeothuk Lake. After an initially friendly reception, Buchan left two of his men behind with the Beothuk. The next day, he found them murdered and mutilated. According to the Beothuk Shanawdithit's later account, the marines were killed when one refused to give up his jacket and both ran away.[15]

Causes of starvation

[edit]

The Beothuks avoided Europeans in Newfoundland by moving inland from their traditional settlements. First, they emigrated to different coastal areas of Newfoundland, places the Europeans did not have fish-camps, but they were over-run. Then, they emigrated to inland Newfoundland.[18] The Beothuks' main food sources were caribou, fish, and seals; their forced displacement deprived them of two of these. This led to the over-hunting of caribou, leading to a decrease in the caribou population in Newfoundland. The Beothuks emigrated from their traditional land and lifestyle into ecosystems unable to support them, causing under-nourishment and, eventually, starvation.[19][20]

Extinction

[edit]

Population estimates of Beothuks remaining at the end of the first decade of the 19th century vary widely, from about 150 up to 3,000.[21] Information about the Beothuk was based on accounts by the womanShanawdithit, who told about the people who "wintered on the Exploits River or at Red Indian Lake and resorted to the coast in Notre Dame Bay". References in records also noted some survivors on the Northern Peninsula in the early 19th century.[22]

During the colonial period, the Beothuk people allegedly endured territorial pressure from other Indigenous groups: Mi'kmaq migrants fromCape Breton Island,[23][24] andInuit from Labrador. "The Beothuk were unable to procure sufficient subsistence within the areas left to them."[25] It has been alleged that French bounties induced the Mi'kmaq to kill Beothuk. This is, however, disputed by most historians and has since come to be known as the "Mercenary Myth".[26][27]

Beothuk numbers dwindled rapidly due to a combination of factors, including:[28]

  • loss of access to important food sources, from the competition with and displacement by European settlers;
  • infectious diseases to which they had no immunity, such assmallpox, introduced by European contact;
  • endemictuberculosis (TB), which weakened tribal members;
  • violent encounters with trappers and settlers.

By 1829, with the death of Shanawdithit, the people were declared extinct.[10][29]

Claims of Modern Survivors

[edit]

Oral histories suggest a few Beothuk survived around the region of theExploits River,Twillingate, Newfoundland and Labrador; and formed unions with European colonists, Inuit and Mi'kmaq.[30] Some families from Twillingate claim descent from the Beothuk people of the early 19th century.

In 1910, a 75-year-old Indigenous woman named Santu Toney claimed she was the daughter of a Mi'kmaq mother and a Beothuk father. She recorded a song in the Beothuk language for the AmericananthropologistFrank Speck. He was conducting field studies in the area. She said her father taught her the song.[31]

Since Santu Toney was born about 1835, this may be evidence some Beothuk people survived beyond the death of Shanawdithit in 1829. Contemporary researchers tried to transcribe the song, as well as improve the recording by current methods. Native groups learned the song to use in celebrations of tradition.[32]

Genocide

[edit]

Scholars disagree in their definition of "genocide" in relation to the Beothuk.[33] While some scholars believe that the Beothuk died out as an unintended consequence of European colonization, others argue that Europeans conducted a sustained campaign of genocide against them.[34]

Writing in 1766, GovernorHugh Palliser reported to the British secretary of state that "the barbarous system of killing prevails amongst our people towards the Native Indians — whom our People always kill, when they can meet them".[29]

If such a campaign did occur, it was explicitly without official sanction after 1769, any such action thereafter being in violation of GovernorJohn Byron's proclamation that "I do strictly enjoin and require all His Majesty's subjects to live in amity and brotherly kindness with the native savages [Beothuk]of the said island of Newfoundland",[23] as well as the subsequent Proclamation issued by GovernorJohn Holloway on July 30, 1807, which prohibited mistreatment of the Beothuk and offered a reward for any information on such mistreatment.[35]

Adhikari comments how the intentional nature of the destructive violence from colonizers is part of the evidence that makes this a case of genocide.[36] Harring draws parallels between the genocidal violence inflicted upon the Beothuk and thegenocidal violence inflicted upon theAboriginal Tasmanians,[37] and that the government's knowledge of such violence while not actively preventing and stopping it implies a tacit approval of the violence.[37]

Adhikari collects various accounts of mass violence conducted by Europeans against the Beothuk, the most infamous of which is a raid that occurred in winter 1789.[38] This was led byJohn Peyton Sr., who was involved in many acts of violence against the Beothuk.[39] Peyton along with two others fired upon a band of 50 Beothuk with buckshot, killing many while injuring all others, beyond some injured individuals who were physically beaten to death after being shot, any others were left to die from their injuries or freeze to death.[40][41]

Notable Beothuk captives

[edit]

Several Beothuk were captured by settlers from theNewfoundland Colony during the early 19th century.

Demasduit

[edit]
Demasduit, 1819
Main article:Demasduit

Demasduit was a Beothuk woman, about 23 years old at the time she was captured by a party led by the fisherman John Peyton Sr. near Beothuk Lake in March 1819.[42]

The governor of the Newfoundland Colony was seeking to encourage trade and end hostilities with the Beothuk. He approved an expedition, to be led by the Scottish explorerDavid Buchan, to recover a boat and other fishing gear foraged by the Beothuk. Buchan was accompanied by two soldiers; the Beothuk mistakenly thought Buchan had hostile intentions and killed and decapitated the soldiers accompanying him.

In 1819, an armed party led by Peyton Sr, totaling about nine men (including Peyton Jr.), came upon a Beothuk camp looking for stolen fishing gear. The Beothuk scattered, although Demasduit was unable to escape and begged for mercy, exposing her breasts to show she was a nursing mother with child. Her husband,Nonosabasut, confronted Peyton Sr. and his party, attempting to negotiate for the release of his wife. Peyton Sr. refused and a scuffle broke out between him and Nonosabasut, resulting in the death of the latter.[42] Peyton Sr. and his party took Demasduit to Twillingate, with her baby dying before they reached the settlement.[42]

The settlers at the Newfound Colony named DemasduitMary March after the month she was taken. Government agents took her toSt. John's, Newfoundland. The colonial government hoped to make Demasduit comfortable while she was living in the colony so she might be a bridge between them and the Beothuk. Demasduit learned someEnglish, and taught the settlers about 200 words of the Beothuk language. In January 1820, Demasduit was released to rejoin her people, but she died oftuberculosis on the voyage to Notre Dame Bay.

Shanawdithit

[edit]
Statue of Shanawdithit inBoyd's Cove
Main article:Shanawdithit

Shanawdithit was Demasduit's niece and the last known full-blooded Beothuk. In April 1823, she was in her early twenties. She, her mother, and sister sought food and help from a whitetrapper, as they were starving. The three were taken to St. John's, but her mother and sister died of tuberculosis, an epidemic among theFirst Nations. CalledNancy April by the settlers, Shanawdithit lived for several years in the home of John Peyton Jr. as a servant.

The explorerWilliam Cormack founded the Beothuk Institute in 1827 to foster friendly dealings with the Beothuk and support their culture. His expeditions found Beothukartifacts but he also learned the society was dying out. Learning of Shanawdithit, in the winter 1828–1829, Cormack brought her to his centre so he could learn from her.[43] He drew funds from his institute to pay for her support.

Shanawdithit made ten drawings for Cormack, some of which showed parts of the island, and others illustrated Beothuk implements and dwellings, along with Beothuk notions and myths.[43] As she explained her drawings, she taught Cormack Beothuk vocabulary. She told him there were far fewer Beothuk than twenty years previously. To her knowledge, at the time she was taken, only a dozen Beothuk survived.[43] Despite medical care from the doctorWilliam Carson, Shanawdithit died of tuberculosis in St. John's on June 6, 1829. At the time, there was no European cure for the disease.

Archaeology

[edit]
This section'stone or style may not reflect theencyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia. See Wikipedia'sguide to writing better articles for suggestions.(July 2023) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
The Beothuk tribe of Newfoundland is extinct as a cultural group. It is represented in museum, historical and archaeological records.

The area around eastern Notre Dame Bay, on the northeast coast of Newfoundland, contains numerous archeological sites containing material from Indigenous cultures. One of these is theBoyd's Cove site. At the foot of a bay, it is protected by a maze of islands sheltering it from waves and winds. The site was found in 1981 during anarcheological survey to locate Beothuk sites to study their artifacts for insight into Beothuk culture.

Records and information were limited, therefore some questions about the people could not be answered because few record-keeping Europeans contacted the Beothuk. By contrast, peoples such as theHuron or the Mi'kmaq interacted with the Frenchmissionaries, who studied and taught them and had extensive trade with French, Dutch, and English merchants - all of whom made records of their encounters.

There are references that document Beothuk presence in the region of Notre Dame Bay in the last half of the 18th and early part of the 19th century.[44] Previous archaeological surveys and amateur finds indicate it was likely the Beothuk lived in the area prior to European encounter. Eastern Notre Dame Bay is rich in animal and fish life: seals, fish, and seabirds, and its hinterland supported large caribou herds.

Archaeologists found sixteen Indigenous sites, ranging in age from theMaritime Archaic era (7000 BC – modern) through thePalaeo-Eskimo period, down to the Recent Indigenous (including the Beothuk) occupation. Two of the sites are associated with the historical Beothuk. Boyd's Cove, the larger of the two, is 3,000 m2 (32,000 sq ft) and is on top of a 6 m (20 ft) glacialmoraine. The coarse sand, gravel, and boulders were left behind byglaciers.

The artifacts provide answers to an economic question: why did the Beothuk avoid Europeans? The interiors of four houses and their environs produced some 1,157nails, the majority of which were forged by the Beothuk. The site's occupants manufactured some sixty-seven projectile points (most made from nails and bones). They modified nails to use as what are believed to bescrapers to remove fat from animal hides, they straightened fish hooks and adapted them as awls, they fashioned lead into ornaments, and so on. In summary, the Boyd's Cove Beothuk took debris from an early modern Europeanfishery and fashioned materials.

Important archaeological sites

[edit]

Source:[45][46]

Uncalibrated Carbon Date (in years Before Present)Site nameReferenceLocation
4900 土 230Beaches[47]In the center of Bonavista Bay.
4540 土 135Cape Cove I[48][49]On the East of Newfoundland North of Bonavista Bay.
3410 土 100Port au Choix cemetery[50]On the Northern Peninsula on the coast of the Bay of Lawrence around Port au Choix.
3270 土 50Gould Site[51]On the Northern Peninsula on the coast of the Bay of Lawrence around Port au Choix.

Groswater Palaeoeskimo

2845 土 120Cow Head site 1[50]On the Northern Peninsula on the coast of the Bay of Lawrence South Port au Choix.
2805 土 130Cow Head site 2[50][see Cow Head site 1]
2760 土 90Phillip's Garden East[52][See Phillip's Garden 1]
2700 土 140Factory Cove[53][see Cow Head site 1]
2090 土 70Phillip's Garden West 1[52][See Phillip's Garden 1]
1960 土 80Phillip's Garden West 2[52][See Phillip's Garden 1]

Dorset Paleoeskimo

2140 土 100Phillip's Garden 1[54]On the Northern Peninsula on the coast of the Bay of Lawrence around Port au Choix.
1970 土 60Phillip's Garden 2[54][See Phillip's Garden 1]
1890 土 90Phillip's Garden 3[54][See Phillip's Garden 1]
1280 土 60Stock Cove 1[55]In Trinity Bay on the base of the Avalon Peninsula.
1280 土 60Stock Cove 2[55][See Stock Cove 1]

Recent

1995 土 90Cows Head Site 1[50][See Stock Cove 1]
1774 土 100Cape Freels[56]On the east of Newfoundland North of Bonavista Bay.
1695 土 110Cows Head Site 2[50][See Stock Cove 1]
830 土 100Sampson Head Cove[57]Halfway between Frenchmans Island and Stock Cove.

Trends in findings across Beothuk archaeological sites

[edit]

All Beothuk sites of note are in coastal areas, implying that prior to European settlement most Indigenous settlements were along the coast. This adds evidence to the claim that the Beothuk were cut off from their food sources which led to many of them starving to death as they were pushed inland.[45] Many sites consist of the same elements because they are all former occupational sites. These sites show a variety of material culture based on what period they are from however most contain the remains of animals, remainders of permanent and semipermanent structures such as remains of fire pits and sleeping hollows.[45][46] Several sites, such as Sampson's Head Cove, had wooden and bone tools as well as stone arrowheads.[46] There have also been instances of stone jewelry found at residential sites. Several people have claimed to have uncovered Beothuk burials; however, these are not substantiated by much evidence of this.[58] Additionally, many cases of Beothuk remains may have been true at one point but because of mishandling the remains are now lost and unable to be verified.[58] A prime example of this is a picture of what was said to be a mummified Beothuk child, which was lost by the Newfoundland Museum that it was held in due to the fact that the museum shared a building with a post office. In the early 1900s the child's remains, as well as the remains of an adult Beothuk and a number of other Beothuk artifacts, were put in storage by the post office and then subsequently lost. Additionally all images of this were subsequently lost once again due to neglect leaving nothing but first hand accounts to even confirm the existence of the remains and artifacts, leaving them entirely to the public imagination.[58] Other accounts confirm that this is fairly normal for Beothuk remains.[58]

Genetics

[edit]

In 2007, DNA testing was conducted on material from the teeth ofDemasduit and her husbandNonosabasut, two Beothuk individuals buried in the 1820s. The results assigned them toHaplogroup X (mtDNA) andHaplogroup C (mtDNA), respectively, which are also found in currentMi'kmaq populations in Newfoundland. DNA research indicates they were solely ofFirst NationIndigenous maternal ancestry, unlike some earlier studies suggesting an Indigenous/European hybrid.[25] However, a 2011 analysis showed although the two Beothuk and living Mi'kmaq occur in the samehaplogroups,SNP differences between Beothuk and Mi'kmaq individuals indicate they were dissimilar within those groups, and a 'close-relationship' theory was not supported.[59]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Dictionary of Newfoundland English (also known by the Mikmaq as the Pi'tawkewaq = up river people, from the mikmaq word pi'tawasi = going up river)". Heritage.nf.ca. RetrievedFebruary 11, 2016.
  2. ^Mithun, Marianne (2001).The Languages of Native North America (First paperback ed.). Cambridge, UK:Cambridge University Press. p. 368.ISBN 0-521-23228-7.
  3. ^Campbell, Lyle (1997).American Indian Languages: The Historical Linguistics of Native America.Oxford University Press. pp. 155, 290.ISBN 0-19-509427-1.
  4. ^Marshall 1996, pp. 7–10.
  5. ^Marshall 1996, p. 7.
  6. ^"Distribution and Size of the Beothuk Population, Leadership, and Communal Activities: A History and Ethnography of the Beothuk". Archived fromthe original on December 22, 2021. RetrievedNovember 11, 2017.
  7. ^abcdAdhikari 2023, p. 117.
  8. ^Marshall 1996, p. 12.
  9. ^Gandhi, Lakshmi (September 9, 2013)."Are You Ready For Some Controversy? The History Of 'Redskin'".NPRadio.
  10. ^abcAnonymous (James McGregor) (1836)."Shaa-naan-dithit, or The Last of The Boëothics".Fraser's Magazine for Town and Country.XIII (LXXV):316–323. Archived fromthe original on August 8, 2016. (Reprint, Toronto: Canadiana House, 1969)
  11. ^Cokinos, Christopher (2009).Hope Is the Thing with Feathers: A Personal Chronicle of Vanished Birds. Penguin Group USA. p. 313.ISBN 978-1-58542-722-2.
  12. ^Hewson, John (2007)."Santu's Song".Memorial University.22 (1).
  13. ^Fagan, Brian M. (2005).Ancient North America: the archaeology of a continent. London: Thames & Hudson.ISBN 0-500-28532-2.
  14. ^abAdhikari 2023, p. 118.
  15. ^abUpton, L.F.S. (1991). "The Extermination of the Beothucks of Newfoundland". In Miller, J. (ed.).Sweet promises: a reader on Indian-white relations in Canada. Toronto:University of Toronto Press. pp. 68–89.ISBN 0-8020-6818-9.
  16. ^Adhikari 2023, pp. 119–121.
  17. ^Marshall 1996, p. 33.
  18. ^Conrad, Margaret.History of the Canadian Peoples (5th ed.). pp. 256–257.
  19. ^"Disappearance of the Beothuk". Heritage Newfoundland and Labrador. Archived fromthe original on September 7, 2017. RetrievedSeptember 6, 2017.
  20. ^"Extinction of the Beothuk: Aboriginal Peoples: Newfoundland and Labrador Heritage".www.heritage.nf.ca. Archived fromthe original on October 6, 2008. RetrievedJanuary 17, 2022.
  21. ^Marshall 1996, p. 147.
  22. ^Marshall 1996, p. 208.
  23. ^ab"The Beothuk of Newfoundland".visitnewfoundland.ca. January 5, 2013. Archived fromthe original on January 8, 2013. RetrievedJanuary 7, 2013.
  24. ^Adhikari 2023, p. 119.
  25. ^abKuch, M; et al. (2007)."A preliminary analysis of the DNA and diet of the extinct Beothuk: A systematic approach to ancient human DNA"(PDF).American Journal of Physical Anthropology.132 (4):594–604.doi:10.1002/ajpa.20536.PMID 17205549. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on February 14, 2015.
  26. ^Hillier, Bernice (June 21, 2021)."There's nothing to prove it, but Mi'kmaw mercenary myth persists, say researchers".CBC News.CBC. RetrievedSeptember 5, 2022.
  27. ^Adhikari 2023, pp. 115–116.
  28. ^"Department of Religious Studies".Memorial University of Newfoundland.Archived from the original on April 10, 2011. RetrievedOctober 15, 2019.
  29. ^abHarring 2021, p. 87.
  30. ^Marshall 1996, pp. 224–226.
  31. ^Hewson, John; Diamond, Beverley (January 2007)."Santu's Song".Newfoundland and Labrador Studies.22 (1). Memorial University's Faculty of Arts:227–257.ISSN 1715-1430. Archived fromthe original on April 5, 2023. RetrievedMarch 24, 2016.
  32. ^Perry, S.J. (September 10, 2008)."Santu's Song: Memorable day for Beothuk Interpretation Centre".Porte Pilot. Archived fromthe original on March 9, 2012. RetrievedJanuary 13, 2010.
  33. ^Rubinstein, W.D. (2004)."Genocide and Historical Debate: William D. Rubinstein Ascribes the Bitterness of Historians' Arguments to the Lack of an Agreed Definition and to Political Agendas".History Today.54. Archived fromthe original on January 31, 2013. RetrievedAugust 24, 2017.
  34. ^
  35. ^"Holloway, John (1744–1826)".Newfoundland and Labrador Heritage Website. August 2000. Archived fromthe original on April 5, 2023. RetrievedDecember 3, 2017.
  36. ^Adhikari 2023, pp. 129–130.
  37. ^abHarring 2021, p. 85.
  38. ^Adhikari 2023, pp. 123–126.
  39. ^Handcock, W. Gordon (1987)."Peyton, John". In Halpenny, Francess G (ed.).Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. VI (1821–1835) (online ed.).University of Toronto Press.
  40. ^Adhikari 2023, pp. 125–126.
  41. ^Harring 2021, p. 86.
  42. ^abcGriffin, Kevin (March 3, 2019)."Beothuk 'genocide' remembered 200 years after kidnapping and murder".The Vancouver Sun. Archived fromthe original on October 9, 2022.
  43. ^abcJames P. Howley, F.G.S., "Drawings by Shanawdithit",The Beothucks or Red Indians: The Aboriginal Inhabitants of Newfoundland, Cambridge:Cambridge University Press, 1915, Memorial University of Newfoundland & Labrador Website
  44. ^Adhikari 2023, p. 120.
  45. ^abcRenouf, M. A. P. (1999). "Prehistory of Newfoundland Hunter-Gatherers: Extinctions or Adaptations?".Arctic Archaeology.30 (3): 405.
  46. ^abcHolly, Donald (2010). "The Ties that Bind and Divide".Journal of the North Atlantic.3 (1):31–44.doi:10.3721/037.003.0101.S2CID 162572596.
  47. ^Sanger, C.W. (1977). "The evolution of sealing and the spread of settlement in northeastern Newfoundland".Social and Economic Papers.8 (1). St. John's: Institute for Social and Economic Research: 136.
  48. ^Austin, S.J. (1980). "Newfoundland: Prehistoric Cultures".Masters Thesis, Memorial University of Newfoundland:5–7.
  49. ^Austin, S.J. (1984). "Maritime Archaic and Recent Indian evidence from Cape Cove Beach, Newfoundland".Maritime Archaic and Recent Indian Evidence from Cape Cove Beach, Newfoundland.2 (1): 2.
  50. ^abcdeTuck, A. J. (1978). "Excavations at Cow Head".Newfoundland Social and Economic Studies.17 (1).
  51. ^Renouf, M. A. P. (1998). "Searching for the Maritime Archaic Indian habitation site at Port au Choix, Newfoundland: an integrated approach using archaeology, geomorphology and sea level history".Culture and Heritage Division, Department of Tourism, Culture and Recreation, Government of Newfoundland and Labrador, St. John's.1 (1).
  52. ^abcRenouf, M.A.P. (1994). "Two transitional sites at Port au Choix, northwestern Newfoundland. In Threads of Arctic Prehistory".Papers in Honour of W.E. Taylor, Jr.:165–195.
  53. ^Auger (1984).Factory cove: recognition and definition of the early palaeo-eskimo period in Newfoundland (Masters Thesis). Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's.
  54. ^abcRenouf, M.A.P. (1987). "Archaeological investigations at the Port au Choix National Historic Park: report of 1986 field activities".Report on File at Archaeology Division, Parks Canada, Atlantic Region, Halifax.
  55. ^abRobins, D.T. (1985). "Stock Cove, Trinity Bay: the Dorset Eskimo occupation of Newfoundland from a southeastern perspective".Master's Thesis. Department of Anthropology, Memorial University of Newfoundland.
  56. ^Carignan (1977). "Beothuck Archaeology in Bonavista Bay".Mercury Series, 69. Archaeological Survey of Canada, National Museums of Canada, Ottawa.
  57. ^Thomson (1990). "Report of a terrestrial archaeological survey and an underwater reconnaissance of Great Mosquito Cove, Bull Arm, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland".Report on File at the Provincial Archaeology Office, Department of Tourism, Culture and Recreation, Government of Newfoundland and Labrador, St. John's, NL, Canada.
  58. ^abcdHarries, John.Human Remains in Society: Curation and Exhibition in the Aftermath of Genocide and Mass-violence.Manchester University Press. pp. 221–248.
  59. ^Pope, A (2011)."Mitogenomic and microsatellite variation in descendants of the founder population of Newfoundland: high genetic diversity in an historically isolated population"(PDF).Genome.54 (2):110–119.doi:10.1139/g10-102.PMID 21326367.

Works cited

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
  • Brown, Robert Craig,Reminiscences of James P. Howley: Selected Years. Toronto: Champlain Society Publications, 1997.[ISBN missing]
  • Hewson, John. "Beothuk and Algonkian: Evidence Old and New",International Journal of American Linguistics, Vol. 34, No. 2 (April 1968), pp. 85–93.
  • Holly, Donald H. Jr. "A Historiography of an Ahistoricity: On the Beothuk Indians",History and Anthropology, 2003, Vol. 14(2), pp. 127–140.
  • Holly, Donald H. Jr. "The Beothuk on the eve of their extinction",Arctic Anthropology, 2000, Vol. 37(1), pp. 79–95.
  • Howley, James P.,The Beothucks or Red Indians, Cambridge University Press, 1918. Reprint: Prospero Books, Toronto. (2000).ISBN 1-55267-139-9.
  • Marshall, I. (2001–2009).The Beothuk. Breakwater Books.ISBN 1-55081-258-0.
  • Pastore, Ralph T.,Shanawdithit's People: The Archaeology of the Beothuks. Breakwater Books, St. John's, Newfoundland, 1992.ISBN 0-929048-02-4.
  • Renouf, M.A.P. "Prehistory of Newfoundland hunter-gatherers: extinctions or adaptations?"World Archaeology, Vol. 30(3): pp. 403–420Arctic Archaeology 1999.
  • Such, Peter,Vanished Peoples: The Archaic Dorset & Beothuk People of Newfoundland. NC Press, Toronto, 1978.[ISBN missing]
  • Tuck, James A.,Ancient People of Port au Choix: The Excavation of an Archaic Indian Cemetery in Newfoundland. Institute of Social and Economic Research, Memorial University of Newfoundland, 1994.[ISBN missing]
  • Winter, Keith John,Shananditti: The Last of the Beothuks. J.J. Douglas Ltd., North Vancouver, B.C., 1975.ISBN 0-88894-086-6.
  • Assiniwi, Bernard, "La saga des Béothuks". Babel, LEMÉAC, 1996.ISBN 2-7609-2018-6

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toBeothuk.
Pre-history
Mythology/Religion
North America
Mesoamerica
Common
Variations
South America
Culture
Art
European
colonization
Modern groups
by country
North America
South America (list)
Related topics
Americas
North America
Mesoamerica
South America
AztecMayaMuiscaInca
CapitalTenochtitlanMultipleHunza andBacatáCusco
LanguageNahuatlMayan LanguagesMuysc CubunQuechua
WritingScriptScript
(Numerals)
NumeralsQuipu
ReligionReligion
(Human Sacrifice)
Religion
(Human Sacrifice)
ReligionReligion
MythologyMythologyMythologyMythologyMythology
CalendarCalendarCalendar
(Astronomy)
Calendar
(Astronomy)
Mathematics
SocietySocietySociety
(Trade)
EconomySociety
WarfareWarfareWarfareWarfareArmy
WomenWomenWomenWomenGender Roles
ArchitectureArchitectureArchitectureArchitectureArchitecture
(Road System)
ArtArtArtArtArt
MusicMusicMusicMusicAndean Music
AgricultureChinampasAgricultureAgricultureAgriculture
CuisineCuisineCuisineCuisineCuisine
HistoryHistoryHistoryHistoryInca history
Neo-Inca State
PeoplesAztecsMayansMuiscaIncas
Notable RulersMoctezuma I
Moctezuma II
Cuitláhuac
Cuauhtémoc
Kʼinich Janaabʼ Pakal
Uaxaclajuun Ubʼaah Kʼawiil
Jasaw Chan Kʼawiil I
Nemequene
Quemuenchatocha
Tisquesusa
Tundama
Zoratama
Manco Cápac
Pachacuti
Atahualpa
Manco Inca Yupanqui
Túpac Amaru
ConquestSpanish Conquest
(Hernán Cortés)
Spanish Conquest
Spanish Conquest of Yucatán
(Francisco de Montejo)
Spanish Conquest of Guatemala
(Pedro de Alvarado)
Spanish Conquest
(Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada)
(Hernán Pérez de Quesada)
(List of Conquistadors)
Spanish Conquest
(Francisco Pizarro)
See also
Authority control databases: NationalEdit this at Wikidata
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Beothuk&oldid=1279946283"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp