MHM The Pre-Dorcet Culture in Manitoba - Churchill MB
Posted by: PeterNoG
N 58° 46.220 W 094° 10.018
15V E 432511 N 6515066
This Manitoba Historical Marker is in front of the Eskimo Museum at 242 La Verendrye Avenue in Churchill, Manitoba.
Waymark Code: WMKQYG
Location: Manitoba, Canada
Date Posted: 05/19/2014
Views: 1
Marker Name: The Pre-Dorcet Culture in Manitoba
Agency: Manitoba Heritage Council
Languages: English, Cree & French
Location: 242 La Verendrye Avenue
Churchill
Marker Text: (English Text)
The Pre-Dorcet Culture in Manitoba
The first occupants of the shores of Hudson Bay were the people of the Pre-Dorset Culture who came from their ancestral homeland in Alaska, about 1500 B.C. In winter, they lived in snow houses with central hearths; and during warmer months in skin tents. Their diet varied according to season: seal in the winter, large sea mammals and fish in summer. In the fall they hunted migrating caribou. In this area archaeologists have discovered small delicate stone tools which were used for cutting, scraping, piercing, and chiselling. These reveal the peoples' skill in adapting to this rugged subarctic environment.
By 1000 B.C. the climate had warmed and the treeline shifted to the north. As Indian people came in from the south, the Pre-Dorset people moved northward out of what is now Manitoba.
Manitoba Heritage Council 1990
Website: [Web Link]
Link to HistoricPlaces.ca or mhs.mb.ca: Not listed
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