Content area

Abstract

This thesis classifies Inuit place names and analyses their meanings to reveal Harvaqtuurmiut land-use history on the Harvaqtuuq [Kazan River], Nunavut Territory. The author collected previously unrecorded toponyms from the territory of this Caribou Inuit society, the Harvaqtuuq [Kazan River], and corroborated the data of earlier researchers. The Harvaqtuuq landscape was organized from foci of subsistence activities by application of Inuktitut geographical terminology and concepts. These foci moved over time and betray changing land-use patterns. The Harvaqtuuq was a frontier for Inuit, due to the need to depend on caribou, and due to the conflict engendered by overlapping Dene occupation. The presence of anthroponyms, and the paucity of pan-Inuit myths in the landscape allow for the speculative interpretation that the names support current theories of a recent arrival of Inuit to the Harvaqtuuq .

Details

Title
Inuit place names and land-use history on the Harvaqtuuq [Kazan River], Nunavut Territory
Author
Keith, Darren
Year
2000
Publisher
ProQuest Dissertation & Theses
ISBN
978-0-612-64162-4
Source type
Dissertation or Thesis
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
304667985
Copyright
Database copyright ProQuest LLC; ProQuest does not claim copyright in the individual underlying works.