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The Inland Tlingit*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 June 2018

Catharine McClellan*
Affiliation:
Spring Grove, Pennsylvania

Extract

Ethnographers confidently point to the Tlingit-speaking population of southeastern Alaska as an important component of the Northwest Coast culture area. They cite these Indians as a maritime oriented group, sharing a common speech and many distinctive culture traits. About fourteen Tlingit tribes have been listed and in part described for the Alaska coast.

I should like to discuss three less well-known Tlingit-speaking bands now located in the interior of northern British Columbia and of southern Yukon Territory. These three neighboring groups are: the Tagish band of Carcross at the junction of lakes Bennett and Nares; the Atlin band on the lake of the same name; and the Teslin band with headquarters on Teslin Lake. This is the farthest inland of the lakes mentioned, and it is little more than a hundred miles from the mild, damp Pacific coast with its abundant sea and shore life.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Society for American Archaeology 1953

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Footnotes

*

The field work on which this paper is based was supported in the summers of 1948, 1949 and 1951 by the National Museum of Canada. Expenses for the winter season of 1950-1951 were generously met by the same institution and by the Margaret Snell Fellowship of the American Association of University Women. I was ably assisted in the field in 1948 and 1949 by Dorothy Libby and in the summer of 1951 by Joan Adams.

References

Editor's Note: For inconsistent or incomplete rendition of special phonetic spellings in this and the succeeding two articles, please do not blame the authors or proofreaders. The symbols required for linguistic spelling were not available in time for use in this issue, so we were only able to approximate from regular type on hand. Consequently the phonetic spelling of native words is unreliable.