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         Scandinavia Greenland Archaeology:     more detail
  1. The Far Traveler: Voyages of a Viking Woman by Nancy Marie Brown, 2007-10-09

41. Kensington Runestone Goes To Sweden
created before the arrival of Scandinavian immigrants in the Midwest.greenland and Ohman s native region of Helsingland in Sweden have also expressed
http://www.archaeology.org/0401/newsbriefs/runestone.html
Your browser does not support javascript Kensington Runestone Goes to Sweden Volume 57 Number 1, January/February 2004 by Kristin M. Romey The disputed Kensington Runestone is prepared for its trip from Alexandria, Minnesota, to the National Historical Museum in Stockholm. (Courtesy Runestone Museum, Minnesota) [LARGER IMAGE] One of America's most notorious "artifacts," whose authenticity has been in dispute since it was discovered by a Minnesota farmer in 1898, has gone on display at Sweden's National Historical Museum. The Kensington Runestone, supposedly an account of fourteenth-century Norse explorers in America, was shipped overseas from the private Runestone Museum in Alexandria, Minnesota, in late fall for an exhibition entitled "The Riddle of the Kensington Runestone." At the opening of the exhibit, in a ceremony attended by more than seven-hundred guests and dignitaries, American ambassador to Sweden Charles Heimbold conceded that the runestone may be a forgery, a "strange, early Swedish-American practical joke" that nonetheless served as a symbol of the enduring ties between the United States and Scandinavia. The runestone has generated enormous interest in Sweden, where it has been the subject of more than 120 articles, and museum attendance records were broken in the first week of the exhibit, which runs until January. Lars Westman, the journalist whose article on the runestone for the Swedish publication Vi inspired the exhibition, has jokingly suggested that "perhaps time has arrived" for the restitution of the stone to Sweden, along with the remains of Olof Ohman, the farmer who discovered it while clearing stumps on his farmland over a century ago.

42. Long Beach City College--Library Subject Guide--The Vikings
Use the term of a Viking area such as Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Iceland, greenland.You may also search for Viking religion, civilization, archaeology,
http://lib.lbcc.edu/handouts/vikings.html
Subject Guides:
The Vikings The Vikings Subject Guide to Library Resources Available

Viking Helmets

Did not have horns:

too cumbersome for battle

Vikings: the only European warriors to use the battle-axe

The Vikings, the proud symbol of Long Beach City College, have long been noted as fierce warrior-pirates from the icy regions of Scandinavia. Well, they did raise fear in the hearts of men as their ships' dragon-heads appeared through the fog like sea monsters and sliding onto shore the fiercest Beserker Vikings came wildly swinging their battle axes. The largest longships could carry more than 60 warriors who could quickly embark from their shore-landed ships. A medieval prayer echoes the fear of the Europeans: "From the fury of the Norsemen, good Lord deliver us." (see John R. Hale: http://www.users.globalnet.co.uk/%7Ejasen01/texts/longship.htm

43. Alibris: History Europe Scandinavia
Used, new outof-print books with subject History Europe scandinavia. Presents brief biographies of the Norse explorer who settled greenland and of
http://www.alibris.com/search/books/subject/History Europe Scandinavia
You'll find it at Alibris! Log in here
Over 50 million used, new and out-of-print books! CART ACCOUNT WISHLIST HELP ... SEARCH search in
Books Music: All CD Vinyl Movies: All DVD VHS
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by author / artist
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... help browse BOOKS Your search: Books Subject: History Europe Scandinavia (368 matching titles) Narrow your results by: Eligible for FREE shipping Narrow results by title Narrow results by author Narrow results by subject Narrow results by keyword Narrow results by publisher or refine further Page of 15 sort results by Top-Selling Used Price New Price Title Author A History of the Vikings more books like this by Jones, Gwyn An illustrated study of the northern peoples and kingdoms of Ireland, Greenland, Britain, and Christian Europe and their culture, society and livelihood. Illustrations. see all copies from new only from first editions SVS Viking Age Iceland more books like this by Byock, Jesse L

44. Alibris: Scandinavia
Used, new outof-print books with subject scandinavia. of Ireland, greenland,Britain, and Christian Europe and their culture, society and livelihood.
http://www.alibris.com/search/books/subject/Scandinavia
You'll find it at Alibris! Log in here
Over 50 million used, new and out-of-print books! CART ACCOUNT WISHLIST HELP ... SEARCH search in
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by subject / genre
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... help browse BOOKS Your search: Books Subject: Scandinavia Narrow your results by: Audiobook Fiction Nonfiction Eligible for FREE shipping Narrow results by title Narrow results by author Narrow results by subject Narrow results by keyword Narrow results by publisher or refine further Page of 20 sort results by Top-Selling Used Price New Price Title Author Eaters of the Dead more books like this by Crichton, Michael A Viking chieftain defends his country from the monsters of the mist in 922 A.D. see all copies from new only from signed copies first editions SVS Beowulf ... more books like this by Raffel, Burton, Professor (Translated by) The earliest extant poem in a modern European language, Beowulf was composed 400 years before the Norman Conquest. As a social document, this great epic poem reflects a feudal, newly Christian world of heroes and monsters, blood and victory and death. As a work of art, it rings with a beauty, power, and artistry that have kept it alive for more... see all copies from new only from signed copies first editions SVS Hanna's Daughters: A Novel of Three Generations ... more books like this by Fredriksson, Marianne

45. Comparative Archeology And Paleoclimatology: Sociocultural Responses To A Changi
MO Baldia Breaking Unnatural Barriers Comparative archaeology, Climate, Society and Ecology during the Middle Bronze Age of Southern scandinavia.
http://www.comp-archaeology.org/WAC5Abstracts2001EnvironmentSocialResponse.htm
Added December 5, 2002. Updated May 4, 2003 hours. May 4, 2003 This page will be updated occasionally to add and revise information. Table of Contents th WORLD ARCHAEOLOGICAL CONGRESS THEME: Past Human Environments in Modern Contexts SESSION: Comparative Archeology and Paleoclimatology: Sociocultural Responses to a Changing World SESSION ABSTRACT ABSTRACTS Sunday, June 22 Douglas Frink: Transforming Linear Limits into Dynamic Solutions: Changes in Environmental Constraints and Cultural Adaptations. Ralf Vogelsang: From Hunter-Gatherer to Livestock-Keeper: Economic Change in Northeastern and Southwestern Africa. Olena V. Smyntyna: Early Prehistoric Migration as Sociocultural Response to a Changing World. Joel Gunn: Dangerous Regions: A Source of Cascading Cultural Changes. Dean Snow: Population Movements and the Archaeological Record. Michael Adler: The Poverty of the Settlement Abandonment Concept in Archaeology: Ancestral Pueblo Landscape Use in the American Southwest. Thomas H. McGovern: It got cold and they died? Climate and the End of Norse Greenland.

46. Czech-American Rmíz Research Program: 1998 Activity Report
archaeology of Eastern North America 206779 (1992) 1994 Record of VolcanismSince 7000 BC from the GISP2 greenland Ice Core and Implications for the
http://www.comp-archaeology.org/RMIZ1998REPORT.HTM
Added September 15, 1998. May 19, 2001 hours. Revision 2.3
Czech-American Rmíz Research Program: 1998 Activity Report©
By
Maximilian O. Baldia, Christel Baldia and Douglas Frink
Table of Content
  • Research Purpose Research Area Cultural Affiliation and Chronology The Fortified Sites of Central Moravia ... Related Links
  • List of Figures
  • Map of Central and Northern Europe Location of Rmíz, Czech Republic The Funnel Beaker culture area Relative chronology of Central Europe Baalberge radiocarbon dates from the Czech Republic and adjacent region Location of Neolithic enclosures in Europe indicating their concentration in Moravia Location of Moravian Funnel Beaker culture enclosed central sites Topographic map of Rmíz Aerial photo of Rmíz with the Sumice river in the foreground Loom weights and spindle whorls from the collections at the Olomouc Museum Charred textile fragment from Rmíz/Kremela I Mound 2
  • Tables
  • The first OCR dates from the Czech Republic
  • Activity Report of the 1998 Czech-American Rmíz Research Program (CARPRO)
    Research Purpose
    It is the purpose of this report to inform you of the ongoing research progress of the Rmíz Project with particular focus on the Rmíz textile. The fieldwork took place from June 8, 1998 until June 29, 1998.

    47. Edinburgh University Library: Resources By Subject: Scandinavian Studies
    scandinavia / NAA / Nordic Archaeological Abstracts / containing Vol.125 /works about greenland, including index of authors, subjects, and publications
    http://www.lib.ed.ac.uk/resbysub/scand_colls.shtml
    Home Subject Guides Scandinavian Studies
    Scandinavian Studies Subject Guide: Collections
    The main collections of Scandinavian material (books and journals) are held in the Main Library at George Square - (Please note that floorplans are currently available in Adobe Acrobat pdf format. About pdf
    • Current Lending Stock (Standard Loan and Short - 1 week - Loan) - acquired since 1999 is on Floor 4 shelved by Library of Congress classification number. Material relevant to the study of Scandinavia/Northern Europe can be found in various sections e.g Scandinavian political institutions and public administration at JN 7011-7066 , and then upwards from that for specific Scandinavian/North European states
      Scandinavian/North European history at DL 1-1180
      Scandinavian/North Germanic languages at PD 1501 and upwards
      Scandinavian literature at PT 7001-7099
      Always check the Catalogue ! Try a search of Subject on the Catalogue too.

    48. Enterline, James Robert. Erikson, Eskimos & Columbus: Medieval European Knowledg
    America made its way through greenland Norsemen into medieval European maps . often as parts of Asia or of scandinavia because Europe’s concept of
    http://www.sochistdisc.org/2003_book_reviews/enterline.htm
    Enterline, James Robert
    As for limitations, Mr. Enterline offers this: “The story so construed is not held out as proven truth. Instead it is a plausible theory to be tested against independent evidence” (p. xix), holding that “the day to day purpose of science is not the establishment of universal final explanations” (p. xix) but the articulation of theories that lead to further research and better theories. His methodology takes the book out of the realm of history: “This is not a history book…. It is a pre-history book that subjects maps and documents, as artifacts, to the inductive methods of archaeology.” (p. xix). Confronted by the inevitable question, did Columbus see these documents, Enterline concludes that whether he did or not, the generation preceding him certainly did and as a “rationally motivated proto-scientist” (p. xix), his views of land to the west were thereby influenced by them.
    Creating that chronology is what much of the remainder of the book is about. In it Enterline states that the “divulgence-hiding paradigms” alluded to above can clarify the heretofore-unexplained features of Arctic and Far Eastern coastal features that appeared on maps after the Norse encountered the Thule Eskimos in western Greenland. There are eighty-six items in this chronological survey, dating from Ptolemy’s “Geographia” in the second century to Hans Poulson Resen’s map of Vinland, 1605. These include maps, manuscripts, books, voyages and other events, all testifying to the breadth and inclusiveness of Enterline’s research. Some will appear more convincing and pertinent than others but together they are marshaled to account for the eventual appearance of North America as a geographical entity separate from Asia.

    49. 2005-2006 UAF Catalog
    Modern scandinavia (s) scandinavia (Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden)from the including Alaska, Siberia, scandinavia, greenland and Canada.
    http://www.uaf.edu/catalog/current/courses/class/hist.html
    Advanced Search
    2005-2006 UAF Catalog Degrees and Program Index History HIST 100X 3 Credits
    Modern World History (s)
    Significant aspects of modern world history, using either a chronological or an issues approach to be announced when offered. The chronological approach will examine major global developments in the twentieth century, while the issues approach will deal with such aspects of the modern world as revolutionary change, the interaction of peoples, ideology and the historical background of significant contemporary events. Also available via Independent Learning. (3+0) Offered Fall, Spring HIST 101 3 Credits
    Western Civilization (s)
    Origins and major political, economic, social and intellectual developments of western civilization to 1500. Also available via Independent Learning. (3+0) Offered Fall HIST 102 3 Credits
    Western Civilization (s)
    Major political, economic, social and intellectual developments of western civilization since 1500. (3+0) Offered Spring HIST 103 3 Credits
    History of the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta (s)
    The region's history beginning with oral traditions about the creation of the area and ending with passage of the Alaska Native Land Claims Act in 1971. Concentrates on Yup'ik social, economic and educational changes, including both Native and non-Native accounts. Offered only at the Kuskokwim Campus. (3+0) Offered As Demand Warrants

    50. Antiquity - Volume 71 Number273, September 1997 - Contents
    DV Clarke Changing paradigms in museum archaeology .744 The PaleoEskimocultures of greenland new perspectives in greenlandic archaeology by
    http://antiquity.ac.uk/ant/071/273/Default.htm

    Home
    About Antiquity
    Online archive
    Project Gallery ... Search Quick search Current Issue Terms and Conditions Notes for Contributors Subscriptions
    Volume 71 Number 273 September 1997
    Contents: Editorial
    Christopher Chippindale
    Editorial
    Reports
    John Waddell David Killick and Suzanne M.M. Young
    Archaeology and archaeometry: from casual dating to a meaningful relationship?
    Paper
    W. R. Ambrose
    Contradictions in Lapita pottery, a composite clone
    Christophe Sand
    The chronology of Lapita ware in New Caledonia
    Papers
    John Edward Terrell and Robert L. Welsch
    Lapita and the temporal geography of prehistory
    J. M. Adovasio and D. R. Pedler
    Monte Verde and the antiquity of humankind in the Americas
    Paul C. Buckland, Andrew J. Dugmore and Kevin J. Edwards
    Bronze Age myths? Volcanic activity and human response in the Mediterranean and North Atlantic regions
    Dale R. Croes
    The North-Central cultural dichotomy on the Northwest Coast of North America: its evolution as suggested by wet-site basketry and wooden fish-hooks
    James H. Barrett
    Fish trade in Norse Orkney and Caithness: a zooarchaeological approach
    Mary Jackes, David Lubell and Christopher Meiklejohn
    Healthy but mortal: human biology and the first farmers of western Europe
    John Robb
    International tooth removal in Neolithic Italian women
    John W. Verano

    51. Arctic Information For Kids
    greenland GUIDE This is the Arctic. A world of breathtaking beauty and strength on greenland, Iceland, scandinavia, Siberia and the Russian Far East.
    http://www.athropolis.com/links/arctic.htm
    LINKS MENU HOME More LINKS... Archaeology Arctic Arctic Animals Castles Cold Places Constellations Environment Franklin Glaciers How Things Work Ice Age Icebergs Inuit Maps Music Northern Lights N/W Passage Peace Pollution Population Recycling Sunrise/Sunset Arctic
    From the Athropolis Story
    Sara's eyes were wide with excitement. What a strange and wonderful place this was - high above the Arctic Circle. No matter which direction she looked, all that she could see was water and ice and snow.
    Visit our

    ARCTIC LIBRARY
    ARCTIC LIBRARY
    There's just about everything here that you'd ever need to know about the Arctic, listed both ALPHABETICALLY and by CATEGORY . Ideal for students. (Double-click any word on these pages for a "pop-up" definition.) ARCTIC MAPS
    Maps that define the Arctic by the ARCTIC CIRCLE , the TREELINE and TEMPERATURE , our BIG MAP OF THE ARCTIC with current weather reports - and MORE! EARTH VIEWER: LOOKING DOWN ON THE NORTH POLE
    Look down on the pole from 1,000,000 km in space. You can adjust the settings to view the Earth from any angle. Very cool stuff! GALLERY OF NORTH POLE AND ARCTIC PHOTOGRAPHS
    An excellent selection of photos from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

    52. GCMRS Study Options
    The School of archaeology and History provides a full range of medieval graduate The nature of society in scandinavia, especially Denmark, in the Viking
    http://www.gla.ac.uk/centres/mars/mphilop2.htm
    List of Study Options DEPARTMENT OF ARCHAEOLOGY
    Gregory Building
    General enquiries: 0141 330 5690
    e-mail: enquiries@archaeology.arts.gla.ac.uk The School of Archaeology and History provides a full range of medieval graduate studies within its departments, including both taught and research degrees. For further details and a separate brochure, please contact the School Administrative Secretary, Christelle Le Riguer, 9 University Gardens, Glasgow G12 8QQ, tel.: 0141 330 3538. Courses offered 1. Anglo-Saxon and Anglo-Scandinavian Northumbria c.600-c.1066 ad
    An integrated approach to the study of this region from the seventh century to the eleventh century and from both an archaeological and historical perspective. Primary historical sources, such as Bede and Saints' Lives, together with excavation data and material such as illuminated manuscripts and sculpture and church architecture, will be considered. The study will encompass both secular and ecclesiastical society, focussing especially upon Anglo-Saxon monasteries and the impact of the Vikings. 2. The Church in the North and West of Britain and Ireland c.400-1100 ad

    53. From Yuku@globalserve.net (Yuri Kuchinsky) Newsgroups Sci
    These professional runologists, both in US and in scandinavia had never seen suchrunes Are we getting into Psychic archaeology stuff here, or what?
    http://www.trends.net/~yuku/tran/8k1.htm
    Click here to go one level up in the directory.

    54. Vikings
    confirmed by the multitude of combs found at archaeology sites. First togo was the Scandinavian presence in Vinland. greenland’s Western Settlement
    http://www.vvdailypress.com/2001-2003/99682200057917.html
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    CIRCULATION Subscribe Now Report a Problem Contact Vacation Stop ... DirectPay AFFILIATES HighDesert.com Desert Dispatch Hesperia Star La Prensa del Mojave ... The Mother Road Friday, August 3, 2001
    Vikings
    Exhibition explores who the Norsemen were and were not
    Hear the word “Viking” and what springs to mind — blond pirates in horned, Wagnerian helmets hacking at villagers with battle-axes? National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution This ornate gold and silver brooch (9th century) found in Hordaland, Norway, may have been an Irish piece returned to Norway as loot or possibly Irish-influenced Norse handiwork. Or do you think of the Gokstad ship, the burial chamber of a 10th-century Norwegian king, as lovely a vessel as ever was built? When I hear of Vikings, I think of a baby, Snorri Thorfinnsson, born circa 1003 on the East Coast of North America, the first child of European parents known to have been born in the Western Hemisphere. Little Snorri’s father was Thorfinn Karlsefni (Leif Eriksson’s brother-in law).

    55. Qua_broc
    archaeology, GEOarchaeology Concern with the interrelationships between Glacial process; Quaternary geology of midwest, scandinavia; geomorphology.
    http://www.geology.wisc.edu/~davem/qprogram/qprogram.html
    Quaternary Studies at the University of WisconsinMadison
    The study of the Quaternary Period has a long and illustrious history at the University of Wisconsin - Madison, beginning with T.C. Chamberlin and R.D. Salisbury a century ago. The UW-Madison now has one of the largest, most diverse groups of Quaternary researchers in North America. Interdisciplinary research is a particular strength in the Quaternary program at UW-Madison. Students can pursue an M.S. or Ph.D. in Quaternary studies in one or more of the graduate departments on campus. In addition to course work required for disciplinary or joint degree or degrees, students take appropriate course work in a related minor discipline. The following is a brief description of areas of interest. Following that is a list of faculty and links to their web sites where available. Finally, a list of cooperating departments also has links to department web pages. ARCHAEOLOGY, GEOARCHAEOLOGY
    Much of the Quaternary-oriented climatological research at UW-Madison concerns the diagnosing and modeling of past and present climates on continent-wide and world-wide scales. This work includes using paleoenvironmental indicators, such as pollen and diatoms, to reconstruct climate changes over the past 18,000 years and the use of general-circulation and other climate models to simulate the behavior of past climates in the late Quaternary and the late Cenozoic. Additional research involves reconstructing the climatological history of the Great Lakes region over the past several centuries. Faculty in most of the other areas of Quaternary studies on campus participate in research that deals with climate change and paleoclimates.

    56. Timeline 1: 25,000 BP To 1299
    Allerød, Norway Deglaciation of scandinavia begins and people begin moving northfollowing Independence Culture I Peary Land, Northeast greenland
    http://www.yukoncollege.yk.ca/~agraham/nost202/4sibt1.htm
    [back to NOST 202 Home Page]
    [back to Module 4]
    Scandinavia/Russia/Siberia Timeline 1:
    25,000 BP to 1299 AD
    Timeline 1:
    25,000 BP 700 BCE 150 AD
    Bibliography

    Timeline 2:
    Timeline 3: 1600- 20th Century
    25,000 BP
    • Late Paleolithic hunter-gatherer societies first ventured beyond the Arctic Circle in northern Russia and Siberia during the milder interstadial climate phase
    24,000 BP
    • "A single giant freshwater lake covering most of the West Siberian Plain at around the time of the Last Glacial Maximum. Stretching some 1500 km from north to south, and a similar distance east to west at its widest points, at its maximum extent it would have had a surface area at least twice that of the Caspian

    • Sea." "Formed by the damming of the Yenisei and Ob rivers by an eastward lobe of the Ural and Putorana ice sheets, this mega-lake appears, from the available dates, to have reached its maximum extent by around 24,000 years ago, and to have existed in some form up until around 12,000 or 13,000 radiocarbon years ago." "The lake which existed would have covered most of western Siberia, stretching about 1500 km from north to south (see map Fig.3), with several large islands of higher ground emerging from it." Complete (unfinished) article by E. U. Lioubimtseva, S. P. Gorshkov and

    57. Biological Archaeology: Modules
    The nature of archaeological theory 2. archaeology and the philosophy of science 3 . The MesolithicNeolithic transition from the Balkans to scandinavia;
    http://www.brad.ac.uk/acad/archsci/depart/pgrad/bioarch/Mods_BA.php
    Advanced Archaeozoology AR-8126M (10)
    Department of Archaeological Sciences
    Location :: Home Biological Archaeology: Modules
    Advanced Archaeozoology AR-8126M (10)
    This module aims to enhance the level of archaeozoological understanding and expertise gained in ‘Paleoeconomy’. The module will study methodological and interpretive issues in archaeozoology alongside practical laboratory sessions on animal bone identification, ageing, sexing, pathology and other bone modifications, recording and quantitative analysis, backed up by studies in the interpretation of published assemblages. The module will be taught via lectures, practical workshops and seminars.
    Advanced Theoretical Archaeology AR-7015T (30)
    To provide a thorough grounding in the development of theory in archaeology and related disciplines. This course uses 32 hours of directed small-group tutorials which develop, in part, out of the basic lecture spine of AR5102M (Theoretical Archaeology, UG, 10 credits), attendance at which is optional. There are 13 topics (10 with 2 hours of tutorial and 3 with 4 hours of tutorial):1. The nature of archaeological theory 2. Archaeology and the philosophy of science 3. The first paradigm: from Tradescant to Worsaae 4. Key tools from social anthropology (2 double tutorials) 5. The culture concept: Kossinna, race, and evolution 6. The earlier and the later Childe 7. Kuhn, Popper, and the basics of new Archaeology 8. Clarkian entitation 9. Collingwood, contextualism and post-processualism 10. Feminism, gender archaeology, and the prehistory of sex (2 double tutorials) 11. Death and the origin and meaning of mortuary practice (2 double tutorials) 12. Wylie's 'interpretative dilemma' 13. The future of archaeological knowledge.

    58. ORB -- Finding Information On Scandinavia
    The available information and the collection on scandinavia are quite typical For archaeology If you are interested in the archaeological information
    http://www.the-orb.net/encyclop/early/pre1000/scanbib3.html
    Encyclopedia Library Reference Teaching ... HOME ORB Online Encyclopedia
    Scandinavia
    Finding Information
    Tamsin Hekala This article is the third in the Scandinavian sources series. The first article is on the primary sources, the second article is on the theoretical filters found in secondary sources, and this article is a case study on how to navigate around the sources and data on a research project. So here are some guidelines and tips on how to do research on a common topic, Vikings.
    You would think that finding information on such a broad topic would be relatively easy. Although there is certainly a great deal of scholarship on Vikings it is not neatly categorized. Nor is it located in any one place or under a couple of key terms. The first criteria for doing your research will be patience. While the first step is knowing how to find, or discover common alternate terms for an area of interest. One useful tool for alternate terms is the Guide to the Listings of the Library of Congress . This guide provides topic listings used by libraries to categorize information. The guide and discussing your project with the reference librarian for additional ideas will assist in making your research project a success.
    A second step is understanding the current state of information be it on-line, CD, or traditional. Critical to the success of a search is an awareness of the current limitations for on-line or CDrom databases. While the information is increasingly more available on-line it is not perfect nor complete. Never assume that if it isn't on-line it doesn't exist. At least half of the research work you will do will be in the older bound sources. The United States the National Union Catalog series pre 1956 is still a good starting place for primary sources and odd collections. Another useful source is the 1988 listing of archives in the United States. A third source for information is the Encyclopedia of Associations which lists professional groups by interest and any related publications. All offer alternate routes to finding the information on your topic.

    59. New Books
    study of towns and villages in the southern part of Western greenland the This dissertation is the product of two visits to Arctic scandinavia in
    http://www.hum.au.dk/cnatlant/newbooks.htm
    CNS Center for North Atlantic Studie s New books in the library Disse informationer findes også på Dansk Revised. 14.07. 2004 CNS MAINEPAGE UNIVERSITY OF AARHUS CNS ... NEWSLETTER New books in the North Atlantic library
    The new books since year 1999 to may 2004 in english language. All our books can be search for in The State and University Library SOL: http://www.statsbiblioteket.dk/english/ The books are organised alphabetic at the list after the autor of the book or after the title !
    Use "Find in page" in the Edit - menu to search for other word! THE AMERINDIANS AND INUIT IN TODAY´S QUEBEC
    " By reading this brocure you will gain a greater understanding of the 11 aboriginal nations
    of Québec."
    Bibliothéque nationale du Québec,
    Canada 1995
    DK 5 : 59.55 Appelt, Martin and Hans Christian Gulløv eds.
    Late Dorset in High Arctic Greenland
    Final report on the Gateway to Greenland project.
    Publication No. 7

    60. List_of_authors
    Hansen, LI Trade and markets in Northern Fennoscandinavia AD 1550-1750. Schools in small settlements in greenland The impact on the opportunities of
    http://www.imv.uit.no/english/science/publicat/actaborealia/list_of_authors.html
    ACTA BOREALIA A NORDIC JOURNAL OF CIRCUMPOLAR SOCIETIES
    List of contents
    ACTA BOREALIA, 1984-1996
    Volume 1(1), 1984
    Bertelsen, R.: Farm mounds of the Harstad area. Quantitative investigations of accumulation characteristics. 7-25. Helskog, K.: The Younger Stone Age settlements in Varanger, North Norway. 39-70. Jahr, E.H.: Language Contact in Northern Norway. Adstratum and substratum in the Norwegian, Sami and Finnish for Northern Norway. 103-112.
    Volume 1(2), 1984 Engelstad, E.: Diversity in Arctic maritime adaptions. An example from the Late Stone Age of Arctic Norway. 3-24. Hansen, L.I.: Trade and markets in Northern Fenno-Scandinavia A.D. 1550-1750. 47-79. Nielssen, A.R.: Animal husbandry among the Norwegian population in Finnmark c. 1685-1705. 81-112.
    Volume 2(1-2), 1985 Proceedings of the Guovdageaidnu (Kautokeino) seminar on "minority research from the point of view of the humanities and social sciences" Mathiesen, P.: Comments on the Guovdageaidnu seminar. 3-8. Hansen, L.I.: Sami title to land in Southern Troms, Norway - Approach, method and data in reconstructing Sami rights of the past. 9-28. Thuen, T.: Acculturation and ethnic survival? 29-45.

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