Lecture on the Aborigines of Newfoundland / Delivered Before the Mechanics' Institute, at St. John's, Newfoundland, on Monday, 17th January, 1859
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About This Book
A lecture surveys competing explanations for the origin of Newfoundland's indigenous people, considering affinities with northeastern Asian groups, Greenlandic Esquimaux, and possible Norse contact, and weighing linguistic and ethnographic evidence. It relates oral traditions about the Beothuk, their erstwhile coexistence and later violent rupture with neighboring Miꞌkmaq, and describes early European encounters and observers' accounts of appearance, customs, and material culture such as birchbark canoes and red ochre. The narrative traces the tribe's displacement amid increasing European influence, recounts nineteenth-century search efforts for surviving members, and emphasizes the difficulty of reconstructing a clear early history from limited and fragmentary sources.
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