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Inuit language --- Inuit language --- Inuit language --- Case. --- Ergative constructions. --- Agreement.
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Animal rights movement. --- Culture conflict --- Human ecology --- Inuit --- Inuit --- Sealing --- Subsistence economy --- Hunting --- Nunavut --- Economic conditions
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Ethnology. Cultural anthropology --- Inuit [Canadian Arctic Native style] --- Netsilik Inuit --- Canada: North
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Netsilik Inuit --- Netsilik Inuit --- Netsilik (Inuit) --- Netsilik (Inuit) --- Material culture --- Exhibitions. --- Antiquities --- Exhibitions. --- Culture matérielle --- Expositions --- Antiquités --- Expositions --- Etnografisch Museum(Antwerp, Belgium) --- Exhibitions. --- Canada, Northern --- Canada (Nord) --- Antiquities --- Exhibitions. --- Antiquités --- Expositions
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Inuit --- Inuit --- Inuits --- Inuits --- Biography. --- Social life and customs. --- Biographies --- Moeurs et coutumes --- Freeman, Mini Aodla. --- Ottawa (Ont.) --- Ottawa (Ont.) --- Social life and customs. --- Moeurs et coutumes
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Ethnology. Cultural anthropology --- costume [mode of fashion] --- skin [animal component] --- Inuit [Canadian Arctic Native style] --- Arctic Alaska --- Canada
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Eskimo masks --- Eskimo art --- Eskimos --- Antiquities. --- Art --- Ethnology. Cultural anthropology --- ethnic art --- masks [costume] --- Alaska --- Eskimo masks - Alaska. --- Eskimo art - Alaska. --- Eskimos - Antiquities. --- Masques inuit --- Masques --- Inuit --- Art inuit --- Alaska (États-Unis) --- États-Unis --- Gazoduc de la route de l'Alaska
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Woodman maintains that fewer than ten bodies were found at Starvation Cove and that the last survivors left the cove in 1851, three years after the standard account assumes them to be dead. Woodman also disputes the conclusion of Owen Beattie and John Geiger's book Frozen in Time that lead-poisoning was a major contributing cause of the disaster. Much of the Inuit testimony presented in Unravelling the Franklin Mystery has never before been published. The earliest Woodman "es was recorded by Franklin searchers only nine years after the disappearance of the Franklin team. Inuit testimony provided Woodman with the pivotal clue in his re-construction of the puzzle of the Franklin disaster: I proceeded from the assumption that all Inuit stories concerning white men should have a discoverable factual basis . [and] managed to discover a scenario which allowed use of all of the native recollections, solved some troubling discrepancies in the physical evidence, and led to some significant new conclusions as to the fate of the beleaguered sailors. Whether or not one agrees with Woodman's conclusions, his account is compelling and his analysis impressive.
Inuit --- Franklin, John, --- Franklin, Dzhon, --- Arctic regions --- Great Britain --- Discovery and exploration --- British. --- Exploring expeditions. --- Discoveries in geography. --- Discovery and exploration.
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Amerika --- Amérique --- Musique --- Muziek --- Music --- Arctic peoples --- Peuples de l'Arctique --- History and criticism --- Discography --- Histoire et critique --- Discographie --- Ethnology. Cultural anthropology --- music [performing arts] --- Siberian Arctic Native styles --- arctic areas --- Arctic Native American styles --- Arctica --- music [performing arts genre] --- Musique inuit --- Inuits --- Moeurs et coutumes
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