Labrador Inuit and Europeans, Contact and Long-term Relations
Part of: Society for Historical Archaeology 2014
The earliest Inuit migration from Alaska to the eastern Arctic in the 13th century coincided with Inuit introduction to Norse material culture. Subsequent migrations brought Inuit into northern Labrador in the late 15th century and a century later their encampments dotted the length of the Labrador coast as far south as the Quebec North Shore, and in time also northwestern Newfoundland. The evidence increasingly suggests that there was never an extended period when Labrador Inuit did not have European goods, obtained either through direct or indirect processes. This is especially true for southern Labrador. Papers in this session consider a many-layered contact landscape. Topics may include Inuit as arbiters of contact relations; dissecting notions of contact; the shifting tenor of cross-cultural interactions from the 1500s to the 1800s; maintenance and viability of Inuit society over the long term; recent archaeological and archival research.
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-10 of 10)
- Documents (10)
- Beyond the pale: Inuit resistance to the Moravian reconstruction of northern Labrador (2014)
- Bretons, Basques and Inuit in Southern Labrador and Northern Newfoundland: the Struggle over Maritime Resources in the 16th and 17th Centuries (2014)
- The Dynamics of Inuit/European Interactions as seen from Sandwich Bay, Labrador (2014)
- Food Practices during the Late 18th Century in Northern Labrador (2014)
- A geochemical approach to Inuit-European contact (2014)
- Iglosuat and sea ice hunting grounds: the contributions of environmental archaeology to the reconstruction of winter cultural landscape of Dog Island, Nunatsiavut (2014)
- Inuit opportunism and long-term contact in southern Labrador (2014)
- Inuit Plant Use in Southern Labrador: A Study of Three Sod Houses from Huntingdon Island 5, Sandwich Bay, South Labrador (2014)
- Making Labrador Home: Concerns and Considerations of How We Think About the Thule in Labrador, Canada (2014)
- Negotiating Contact: Examing the Coastal Trade Network of the Labrador Inuit (2014)