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  1. Mar 6, 2020 · vii, 62 pages 24 cm Includes bibliographical references (pages 51-62) Types of tribal organization -- Identification and classification of tribal groups -- The history of language classification in California -- Maps of California tribes published before 1925 -- The revised Kroeber map of 1925 -- The C. Hart Merriam tribal map -- The nature of tribal territories and boundary lines in ...

  2. California languages belonging to the three relevant exterior stocks-Algic (Algonquian-Wiyot-Yurok), Na­ Dene, and Uto-Aztecan-have been genetically identi­ fied in the very process of discovering their exterior relationships, a simple and obvious task in the case of the Uto-Aztecan and Athapaskan languages but much more

  3. It also includes Community-University Research Alliance (CURA) project records, articles, books, transcripts and workshops on the culture of Indigenous peoples, specifically the Inuit and Blackfoot, and Indigenous languages such as Anishinâbe, Ojibway, Syllabics, and Kitchitwa Miteh.

  4. May 31, 2014 · The linguistic diversity of California is pronounced. Today, variety comes mostly from the languages of relatively recent immigrants, as discussed in an earlier post. But pre-contact California could have competed with Papua New Guinea for the status of the most linguistically diverse place on earth.

  5. This map shows the major language groupings indigenous to what is today the province of Alberta. Each community’s language is indicated by a coloured dot.

  6. Genealogy for George Henry Holmes (1868 - 1928) family tree on Geni, with over 230 million profiles of ancestors and living relatives.

  7. He moved to Innisfail, Alberta in 1893 and to Red Deer, Alberta in 1907. He was medical officer to the battalions stationed at Red Deer in First World War. He retired to Victoria, British Columbia in 1922.

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