Maps of Tlingit
Canada and Alaska: Languages and Intercommunication (Bakker)
Canada and Alaska: Languages and Intercommunication
Source:
Bakker, Peter and Robert A Papen. 1996. Canada and Alaska: Languages and Intercommunication, in Wurm, Stephen Adolphe, Peter Mühlhäusler, and Darrell Trevor Tryon (Ed) Atlas of languages of intercultural communication in the Pacific, Asia, and the Americas. I, Maps. Atlas of Languages of Intercultural Communication in the Pacific, Asia, and the Americas. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
Date Digitized: 2010
Map Description:
Illustrated here are a series of boundaries of native American language groups in Canada and Alaska. The arrows indicate directions of communication and cultural or language influence as hypothesized by Bakker and Papen (1996).
Date Digitized: 2010
Map Description:
Illustrated here are a series of boundaries of native American language groups in Canada and Alaska. The arrows indicate directions of communication and cultural or language influence as hypothesized by Bakker and Papen (1996).
Note: Scanned or downloaded images have been geo-registered for compatibility with our project interface. Slight imperfections are an inevitable result of the registration process. View original image(s) to see the unaltered map(s).
Early Indian Tribes, Culture Areas and Language Stocks in Alaska (Sturtevant)
Early Indian Tribes, Culture Areas and Language Stocks in Alaska
Source: Perry-Castañeda Library Map Collection. Historical Maps of the United States.
Data Source: Early Indian Tribes, Culture Areas, and Linguistic Stocks. The National Atlas of the United States of America. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Dept. of the Interior, Geological Survey, 1970.
Map Description:
Illustrated here are the Native American tribes of Alaska and the Aleutian Islands along with their linguistic stocks, as hypothesized by Sturtevant. He notes that tribal distributions depicted are sometimes arbitrary, as the information used to determine them was gathered over a large span of time. He also states that the cultural areas which indicate "minor" tribes that share cultural traits are vaguely classified at times, and that the distribution of many cultural traits does not coincide (Sturtevant).
Other resources related to this project:
Early Major Indian Tribes, Culture Areas and Linguistic Stocks (Sturtevant)
Data Source: Early Indian Tribes, Culture Areas, and Linguistic Stocks. The National Atlas of the United States of America. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Dept. of the Interior, Geological Survey, 1970.
Map Description:
Illustrated here are the Native American tribes of Alaska and the Aleutian Islands along with their linguistic stocks, as hypothesized by Sturtevant. He notes that tribal distributions depicted are sometimes arbitrary, as the information used to determine them was gathered over a large span of time. He also states that the cultural areas which indicate "minor" tribes that share cultural traits are vaguely classified at times, and that the distribution of many cultural traits does not coincide (Sturtevant).
Other resources related to this project:
Early Major Indian Tribes, Culture Areas and Linguistic Stocks (Sturtevant)
Note: Scanned or downloaded images have been geo-registered for compatibility with our project interface. Slight imperfections are an inevitable result of the registration process. View original image(s) to see the unaltered map(s).
First Nations of British Columbia (UBC Museum of Anthropology)
First Nations of British Columbia
Source:
University of British Columbia Museum of Anthropology
Contact: info
moa.ubc.ca, Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia, 6393 N.W. Marine Dr, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z2, 604.827.5932
Usage Notes/Copyright Status: Property of University of British Columbia Museum of Anthropology
Date Downloaded: August 2006
Map Description:
From original source: "The intent is to provide a more accurate representation of First Nations in British Columbia. Boundaries shown are language areas and not an authoritative depiction of tribal territories. The names listed are the ones First peoples prefer to call themselves. Terms and spellings do not reflect all dialects or names used by First Nations living within the illustrated regions." The creators also note that this map is regularly revised.
Contact: info
moa.ubc.ca, Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia, 6393 N.W. Marine Dr, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z2, 604.827.5932
Usage Notes/Copyright Status: Property of University of British Columbia Museum of Anthropology
Date Downloaded: August 2006
Map Description:
From original source: "The intent is to provide a more accurate representation of First Nations in British Columbia. Boundaries shown are language areas and not an authoritative depiction of tribal territories. The names listed are the ones First peoples prefer to call themselves. Terms and spellings do not reflect all dialects or names used by First Nations living within the illustrated regions." The creators also note that this map is regularly revised.
Note: Scanned or downloaded images have been geo-registered for compatibility with our project interface. Slight imperfections are an inevitable result of the registration process. View original image to see the unaltered map(s).
Indigenous Peoples of the North Pacific in North America, c. 1880 (Donaldson, Fuller and Steinback)
Indigenous Peoples of the North Pacific in North America, c. 1880
Source: Donaldson, Ben, Fuller, Andrew, and Charles Steinback. 2004. Indigenous Peoples of the North Pacific, c. 1880. Atlas of Pacific Salmon: The First Map-Based Assessment of Salmon in the North Pacific. ed. by Xanthippe Augerot, USA: University of California Press.Contact: University of California Press
Date Digitized: 9 March 2011
Map Description:
This is a map of indigenous peoples in the North Pacific region of North America circa 1880. The original image appears in the Atlas of Pacific Salmon: The First Map-Based Assessment of Salmon in the North Pacific from the University of California Press.
Other LLMAP resources related to this project:
Indigenous Peoples of the North Pacific in Asia, c.1880 (Donaldson, Fuller and Steinback)
Note: Scanned or downloaded images have been geo-registered
for compatibility with our project interface. Slight
imperfections are an inevitable result of the registration
process.
View original image(s)to see the unaltered
map(s).
North America: Languages of Canada and Alaska (PROEL)
Languages of Canada and Alaska
Source:
The Proel Map of Canada and Alaska
The LINGUIST List MultiTree Language Database.
Date Downloaded:   01/01/2010
Map Description:
This map shows the distribution of languages and language families in Canada and Alaska.
More information on the individual languages and language families can be obtained by right-clicking on the map and following the links to the Multitree database, or by going to the PROEL project site.
The LINGUIST List MultiTree Language Database.
Date Downloaded:   01/01/2010
Map Description:
This map shows the distribution of languages and language families in Canada and Alaska.
More information on the individual languages and language families can be obtained by right-clicking on the map and following the links to the Multitree database, or by going to the PROEL project site.
Note: Scanned or downloaded images have been geo-registered for compatibility with our project interface. Slight imperfections are an inevitable result of the registration process. View original image(s) to see the unaltered map(s).
North America: Northwest Coastal Peoples (The Canadian Encyclopedia)-REPLACED_BY_GODDARD_MAP
Western Canada: Northwest Coastal People
Source: Findlay, Heather, Anna Sajecki and Melissa Bremer. 2007. Canada's First Peoples. Based on The Canadian Encyclopedia. 2010. Historica Dominion.Date Digitized: 16 September 2010
Map Description:
This map shows the locations of some of the first peoples of western Canada along the Pacific Coast of Canada - languages which cross the border into Alaska indicate only their Canadian extent. For instance, Tlingit is spoken all the way down to the coast, but this is not shown on the map. These peoples arrived in the area around 10,000 years ago and formed several distinct groups with many unique languages; some estimate that there were nineteen languages or more present in the region, distributed across seventy or more nations. This map indicates language subgroupings.
Note: Scanned or downloaded images have been geo-registered for compatibility with our project interface. Slight imperfections are an inevitable result of the registration process. View original image(s) to see the unaltered map(s).