Friday, August 27th, 2010
submitted by: Bob Evans
This book is unquestionably the best book I have read about Quetico Provincial Park. Jon and his wife Marie were Quetico Rangers, first at Beaverhouse, then Cache Bay and Prairie Portage. After his tenure there he returned to Graduate School for a Master’s program, I believe, in Archaeology, and worked as an archaeologist in Quetico for several years. During that time he interacted with and got to know a number of the First Nation citizens of the Lac La Croix community. As we are very much interested in the pictographs of the area, his multiple comments on this aspect of First Nation culture and religion were very interesting to us.
This book relates a broad range of topics from the early geological and natural history of the time when the glaciers of the last ice age were retreating from the area now Quetico, to contemporary issues with the park. It is divided into sections allowing the reader to read sections of interest in any order. To me, with my woefully inadequate knowledger of pre-history, the readings on the early post-glacial era and the Paleo-Indians were fascinating. For the biologist or the reader interested in biology and ecology, the chapters in part three relating to ecology, tell the stories of lichens, orchids (yes, orchids in Quetico), moose, ravens and forest fire ecology along with other topics. As a biologist and biochemist myself, I found these chapters fascinating, well written, and full of interesting information. I learned a great deal from them. (more…)
Tags: archaeology, Beaverhouse, Cache Bay, canoe country, Ecology, First Nation, forest fire, ice age, Indian pictographs, Jon Nelson, Lac La Croix, lichen, Marie Nelson, McNiece, moose, natural history, Near to Nature's Heart, Northwoods Pictographs, orchids, paleo-indians, pines, Prairie Portage, Quetico, ravens, Wawiag
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Saturday, April 24th, 2010
submitted by: Bob Evans
The complete title to the book is “Reading Rock Art: Interpreting The Indian Rock Paintings Of The Canadian Shield.” It is an excellent resource for people wanting casual reading to learn more about the pictographs of canoe country but it is also a scholarly work with an excellent and extensive bibliography for those who want more intensive study of this subject. We have used both the text and the bibliographic references extensively in our research into the Quetico and Boundary Waters pictograph sites. This book is cited as a reference in nearly all of our publications. The Northwoods Pictograph series of informational bulletins for use in the field (see pictograph pages on our website) contains extensively referenced work by Dr. Rajnovich.
Grace Rajnovich is an archaeologist who spent fourteen years in field research before writing this excellent book. Her academic preparation (B.A. from York University, M.A. in English from University of Toronto, M.A. in Anthropology from University of Manitoba, and Ph.D. in Anthropology from Michigan State University) is excellent, but don’t get the idea that this is a hard-to-read book written in academic jargon. Her well-rounded approach to the content not only presents interpretations of many figures found on the rocks of the Canadian Shield, but weaves the figures and their meanings into an overall discussion of the culture and religious practice of the Native Americans who painted these messages on the rocks. (more…)
Tags: Angonkian language, anthropology, archaeology, Boundary Waters, Canadian Shield, canoe, Kawnipi Lake, Manitou, McKenzie Lake, medicine societies, Nanaboujou, Northwoods Pictograph, pictographs, Quetico, Rajnovich
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