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Dryberry lake prisoner
Dryberry lake prisoner








dryberry lake prisoner

The first edition is available in various formats on the Amazon.ca website.

Dryberry lake prisoner pdf#

(See here for a pdf list of those 264 sites.)Ĭlick on the book title to see a copy of the 1962 first edition of the book, which the Royal Ontario Museum contributed to the digital Internet Archive in 2014. By 1967 and the second edition of his book Indian Rock Paintings of the Great Lakes, he recorded 264 different sites, most in Ontario, with the others in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta. Selwyn Dewdney is the man most responsible for systematically tracking down, recording, and analyzing the Anishinaabe pictographs of Ontario. Indian Rock Paintings of the Great Lakes. You can email me at _ Essential Sources: Selwyn Dewdney. So too would any jpg images you would be willing to make available to others who share your passion and interest. Over time I hope to eliminate most of the inaccurate information.Īny specific location info – GPS co-ordinates or map-indicated – you can provide to improve this post would be appreciated. S ome site locations that you will find here are vague and, I am sure, completely wrong! It may be the nature of the source I used it may be my bad interpretation of that source. Please note – While I have visited a few of the sites mentioned in this post, for the most part I am drawing from the book sources mentioned below, other material found online or at the Toronto Reference Library, and the occasional email contact. To directly access a particular area, just click on its name below:Īlso, see Three Essential Sources of Information The province has been divided into the following regions, with Highway 17 as the northern limit of 1 and 2. Quetico Provincial Park Lake of the Woods/Rainy Lake region Mooseland Lake The Bloodvein River in Woodland Caribou Provincial Park Cliff Lake on the Pikitigushi River system Agawa Rock Missinaibi Lake Little Missinaibi Lake Diamond Lake (Temagami) Mazinaw Lake (Bon Echo) _ The sites I have visited and posted a report on are those with hot links. Īny of the following Ontario locations would provide a great introduction to Anishinaabe rock paintings. It includes the Innu, the Algonquin, the Ojibwe (aka Chippewa in the USA), and the Cree peoples. Note that Anishinaabe (one of many spellings when transliterated into English using Roman letters) is the name by which the Algonkian-speaking Peoples know themselves. See the Anishinaabe Rock Images folder for more posts on various provinces and states. This post looks specifically at sites located in Ontario. The Previous Post – Anishinaabe Pictograph Sites of the Canadian Shield – provides an overview.










Dryberry lake prisoner