For further reading:

1) Arima, Eugene, Y., 1995: Blackfeet and Palefaces: The Pikani and Rocky Mountain House. A Commemorative History from the Upper Saskatchewan and Missouri Fur Trade. Ottawa: The Golden Dog Press.
2) Atcheson, Nathaniel, 1811: On the origin and progress of the North-West Company of Canada: with a history of the fur trade, as connected with that concern, and observations on the political importance of the company's intercourse with, and influence over the Indians or savage nations of the interior, and on the necessity of maintaining and supporting the system from which that influence arises, and by which only it can be preserved. London: Cox, Son and Baylis, 1811.
3) Bibeau, Donald F., 1984: Fur Trade literature from a Tribal Point of View: a Critique, pp 83-92, IN Thomas C. Buckley, ed., Rendezvous: Selected Papers of the Fourth North American Fur Trade Conference. St-Paul: North American Fur Trade Conference.
4) Binnema, Theodore, 1994: "The Gros Ventres in the Canadian Fur Trade: A Response to Thomas F. Schilz." American Indian Quarterly 18 (4): 533-40.
5) Black-Rogers, Mary, 1985: "Starving" and Survival in the Subarctic Fur Trade: A Case for Contextual Semantics, pp 618-49, IN Bruce Trigger et al. eds., Le castor fait tout: Selected Papers of the Fifth North American Fur Trade Conference. Montréal: Société Historique du Lac Saint-Louis.
6) Brown, Jennifer, 1980: Strangers in blood. Fur trade company families in Indian country. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press.
7) Calloway, Colin C., 1971: Crown and Calumet: British-Indian Relations, 1783-1815. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.
8) Chamberlain, Alexander F., 1904: "Iroquois in Northwestern Canada." American Anthropologist 6: 459-63.
9) Davidson, Gordon C., 1918: The North West Company. Berkeley: University of California Press.
10) Devine, Edward J., 1922: Historic Caughnawaga. Montreal: Messenger Press.
11) Dickason, Olive P., 1997: Canada's First Nations: a History of Founding Peoples from Earliest Times. Toronto: Oxford University Press.
12) Eccles, W. J., 1988: The Fur Trade in the Colonial Northeast, pp 324-34, IN W. B. Washburn, ed., Handbook of North American Indians, Volume 4: History of Indian-White Relations. Washington: Smithsonian Institution.
13) Ewers, John C., 1954: "The Indian Trade of the Upper Missouri before Lewis and Clark." Missouri Historical Society Bulletin 10: 436-9.
14) Fisher, Robin, 1977: Contact and Conflict: Indian-European Relations in British Columbia 1774-1890. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press.
15) Fisher, Robin, 1992: Indian Control of the Maritime Fur Trade and the Northwest Coast, pp 279-93, IN J.R. Miller, ed., Sweet Promises: a Reader of Indian-White Relations in Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
16) Fowler, Loretta, 1987: Shared Symbols, Contested Meanings: Gros Ventre Culture and History, 1778-1984. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
17) Francis, Daniel, 1982: Battle for the West: Fur Traders and the Birth of Western Canada. Edmonton: Hurtig Publishers.
18) Frisch, Jack A., 1976a: Iroquois in the West, pp 544-46, IN Bruce G. Trigger, ed., Handbook of North American Indian, Volume 15: Northeast. Washington, Smithsonian Institution.
19) Frish, Jack A., 1976b: "Some Ethnological and Ethnohistorical Notes on the Iroquois in Alberta." Man in the Northeast 12: 51-64.
20) Gélinas, Claude, 2000: "L'aventure de la North West Company en Mauricie, 1799-1814." Revue d'histoire de l'Amérique française 53 (3) : 401-19.
21) Hodge, F.W., 1913: Handbook of Indians of Canada. Ottawa: C.H. Parmelee.
22) Josephy, Alvin M., 1965: The Nez Perce Indians and the Opening of the Northwest. New Haven and London: Yale University Press.
23) Krech, Shepard III, 1984: "The Trade of the Slavey and Dogrib at Fort Simpson in the Early Nineteenth Century", pp 99-143, IN Shepard Krech III, ed., The Subarctic Fur Trade: Native Social and Economic Adaptations. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press.
24) McMillan, Alan D., 1995: Native Peoples and Cultures of Canada. Vancouver/Toronto: Douglas and McIntyre.
25) Meyer, David and Paul C. Thistle, 1995: "Saskatchewan River Rendezvous Centers and Trading Posts: Continuity in a Cree Social Geography." Ethnohistory 42 (3): 403-44.
26) Miller, James R., 1991: Skyscrapers hide the Heavens. A History of Indian-White Relations in Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
27) Milloy, John S., 1988: The Plains Cree: Trade, Diplomacy and War, 1790 to 1870. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press.
28) Nicks, Trudy, 1960: The Iroquois and the Fur Trade in Western Canada, pp 85-101, IN Carol M. Judd and Arthur J. Ray, eds., Old Trails and New Directions. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
29) Parker, James, 1987: Emporium of the North: Fort Chipewyan and the Fur Trade to 1835. Regina: Alberta Culture and Multiculturalism/Canadian Plains Research Center.
30) Ray, Arthur J., 1974: Indians in the Fur Trade: their role as trappers, hunters, and middlemen in the lands southwest of Hudson Bay, 1660-1870. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
31) Ray, Arthur J., 1980: Indians as Consumers in the Eighteenth Century, pp 255-71, IN Carol M. Judd and Arthur J. Ray, eds., Old Trails and New Directions. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
32) Ray, Arthur J., 1988: The Hudson's Bay Company and Native People, pp 335-50, IN W. B. Washburn, ed., Handbook of North American Indians, 4: History of Indian-White Relations. Washington: Smithsonian Institution.
33) Reedy-Maschner, Katherine L., & Herbert D.G. Maschner, 1999: "Marauding Middlemen: Western Expansion and Violent Conflict in the Subarctic". Ethnohistory 46 (4): 703-43.
34) Rich, E.E., 1992: Trade Habits and Economic Motivations among the Indians of North America, pp 157-79, IN J.R. Miller, ed., Sweet Promises: a Reader of Indian-White Relations in Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
35) Savard, Rémi, 1994: Un projet d'état Indien indépendant à la fin du 18e siècle et le traité de Jay. Recherches amérindiennes au Québec 24 (4): 57-69.
36) Schilz, Thomas F., 1988: "The Gros Ventres and the Canadian Fur Trade, 1754-1831." American Indian Quarterly 12 (1): 41-56.
37) Sloan, W. A., 1979: The Native Response to the Extension of the European Traders into the Athbaska and Mackenzie Basin, 1770-1814. Canadian Historical Review 60 (3) : 281-99.
38) Surtees, Robert J., 1985: "The Iroquois in Canada", Pp 67-81, IN Francis Jennings et al, eds., The History and Culture of Iroquois Diplomacy: An Interdisciplinary Guide to the Treaties of the Six Nations and their League. Syracuse: Syracuse Press.
39) Thistle, Paul C., 1986: Indian-European Trade Relations in the Lower Saskatchewan River Region to 1840. Winnipeg: The University of Manitoba Press.
40) Trigger, Bruce G., 1985: Natives and Newcomers. Canada's "Heroic Age" reconsidered. Kingston and Montreal: McGill/Queen's University Press.
41) Van Kirk, Sylvia, 1992: The Impact of White Women on Fur Trade Society, pp 181-204, IN J.R. Miller, ed., Sweet Promises: a Reader of Indian-White Relations in Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
42) Van Kirk, Sylvia, 1993: Many Tender Ties: Women in Fur Trade Society, 1670-1970. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.
43) White, Bruce M., 1984: "Give is a little Milk": the Social and Cultural Significance of Gift Giving in the Lake Superior Fur Trade, pp 185-198, IN Thomas C. Buckley, ed., Rendezvous: Selected Papers of the Fourth North American Fur Trade Conference. St-Paul: North American Fur Trade Conference.
44) White, Bruce M., 1985: Give us a little Milk: Economics and Ceremony in the Ojibway Fur Trade. McGill University, Master's Thesis in History.
45) White, Bruce M., 1999: The Woman who married a Beaver: Trade Patterns and Gender Roles in the Ojibwa Fur Trade. Ethnohistory 46 (1): 109-48.
46) White, Richard, 1991: The Middle-Ground: Indians, Empires and Republics in the Great Lakes Region, 1650-1815. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
47) Wood, Raymond W. and Thomas D. Thiessen, eds., 1985: Early Fur Trade on the Northern Plains. Canadian Traders Among the Mandan and Hidatsa Indians, 1738-1818: the Narratives of John Macdonell, David Thompson, François-Antoine Larocque, and Charles McKenzie. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.


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