天堂获得,失去和重新获得:魁北克下北岸的脉搏迁移和因纽特考古

IF 0.5 4区 社会学 Q1 Social Sciences Arctic Anthropology Pub Date : 2016-04-01 DOI:10.3368/aa.56.1.52
W. Fitzhugh
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引用次数: 8

摘要

因纽特人占领魁北克下北岸的长期争议问题,在五个17 - 18世纪的草屋村庄的发掘中得到了解答。很少有有机器物幸存下来,保存下来的物质文化几乎完全是欧洲器物或因纽特人形式的材料。动物群表明冬季活动。黑尔港是因纽特人-巴斯克人/法国人的“合资企业”,与其他定居点不同。与拉布拉多因纽特人相比,下北岸因纽特人似乎与欧洲人有更积极的关系,但他们的存在受到了因纽特人的激烈争夺,因纽特人占据了他们的沿海土地。关于全年入住率的问题仍然存在,因为很少有夏季景点被发现。下北岸因纽特人的占领是一波迁徙,随后是一个世纪后的长期定居和撤退,还是一系列偶然的迁徙,随后是周期性的甚至是季节性的撤退?历史记录显示,因纽特人断断续续的敌对行动在公元1750年因纽特人撤退后结束。在19世纪中期,因纽特人回来了,今天他们的基因和文化遗产是下北岸生活的重要特征。
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Paradise Gained, Lost, and Regained: Pulse Migration and the Inuit Archaeology of the Quebec Lower North Shore
The long-contested question of the Inuit occupation of the Quebec Lower North Shore has been illuminated by excavations at five 17th–18th-century sod-house villages. Few organic artifacts survive, and the preserved material culture is almost entirely of European artifacts or materials refashioned into Inuit forms. Faunal assemblages indicate winter occupations. Hare Harbor represents a departure from other settlements in having been an Inuit-Basque/French “joint venture.” Lower North Shore Inuit appear to have had a more positive relationship with Europeans than Labrador Inuit, but their presence was vigorously contested by Innu whose coastal lands they appropriated. Questions about year-round occupancy remain because few summer sites have been found. Was the Lower North Shore Inuit occupation a wave migration followed by long-term settlement and withdrawal a century later, or a series of episodic migrations followed by periodic or even seasonal withdrawal? Historical records document intermittent Innu hostilities ending with Inuit withdrawal by AD 1750. In the mid-19th century, Inuit returned, and today their genetic and cultural heritage is an important feature of Lower North Shore life.
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来源期刊
Arctic Anthropology
Arctic Anthropology ANTHROPOLOGY-
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
0.00%
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0
期刊介绍: Arctic Anthropology, founded in 1962 by Chester S. Chard, is an international journal devoted to the study of Old and New World northern cultures and peoples. Archaeology, ethnology, physical anthropology, and related disciplines are represented, with emphasis on: studies of specific cultures of the arctic, subarctic and contiguous regions of the world; the peopling of the New World; relationships between New World and Eurasian cultures of the circumpolar zone; contemporary problems and culture change among northern peoples; and new directions in interdisciplinary northern research.
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