Cover
Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction
"For Every Plant There is a Use": The Botanical World of Mexica and Iroquoians
The Historical and Archaeological Evidence for the use of Fish as an Alternate Subsistence Resource among Northern Plains Bison Hunters
"Our Country": The Significance of the Buffalo Resource for a Plains Cree Sense of Territory
Manomin: Historical-Geographical Perspectives on the Ojibwa Production of Wild Rice
Aboriginal Resource use in the Nineteenth Century in the Great Plains of Modern Canada
Dependency: Charles Bishop and the Northern Ojibwa
Changing Resource-Use Patterns of Saulteaux Trading at Fort Pelly, 1821 to 1870
Rainy River Sturgeon: An Ojibway Resource in the Fur Trade Economy
Grant Me Wherewith to Make My Living
"Principally Rocks and Burnt Lands": Crown Reserves and the Tragedy of the Sturgeon Lake First Nation in Northwestern Ontario
The Sinews of Their Lives: Native Access to Resources in the Yukon, 1890 to 1950
State Policy and the Native Trapper: Post-War Policy toward Fur in the Northwest Territories
The Board of Investigation and the Water Rights of Indian Reserves in British Columbia, 1909 to 1926
Indian Title as a "Celestial Institution": David Mills and the St. Catherine's Milling Case
The St. Catherine's Milling and Lumber Company versus the Queen: Indian Land Rights as a Factor in Federal-Provincial Relations in Nineteenth-Century Canada
Inuit Land Use Studies and the Native Claims Process
Fur Trade History and the Gitksan-Wet'suwet'en Comprehensive Claim: Men of Property and the Exercise of Title
Defending World Markets for Fur: Aboriginal Trapping, the Anti-Harvest Movement and International Trade Law
Contributors