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词条 Sadlermiut
释义

  1. History

  2. Origins

  3. Lifestyle

  4. Language

  5. References

  6. External links

{{short description|Ethnic group}}{{Infobox ethnic group|
|group=Sadlermiut
|image=
A Sadlermiut man paddling on an inflated walrus skin, 1830[1]
|popplace=Canada
|langs=Undetermined
|related=Dorset culture, other Inuit, Aleuts, Yupiks
|rels=Possibly shamanism
}}

The Sadlermiut (also called Sagdlirmiut,[2][3] or Sallirmiut in modern Inuktitut spelling, from Sadlerk[4] now Salliq, the Inuktitut name for the settlement of Coral Harbour, Nunavut) were an Inuit group living in near isolation mainly on and around Coats Island, Walrus Island, and Southampton Island in Hudson Bay.[5] They survived into the early 20th century and were thought by some to have been the last remnants of the Dorset culture[4] as they had preserved a culture and dialect distinct from the mainland Inuit. Despite their culture and local traditions seeming to show combined elements of both the Dorset and Thule societies,[6] genetic studies show no Dorset admixture and prove a sole Inuit ancestry leading many to conclude the cultural difference may be entirely due to their isolation from the mainland Inuit.[7] Research published in 2015 found that the Sadlermiut were genetically Thule who had somehow acquired Dorset cultural features, such as stone technology. It remains a mystery how they acquired Dorset technology in the absence of obvious genetic admixture such as through intermarrying.[8]

History

In 1824, HMS Griper, under Captain George Francis Lyon, anchored off Cape Pembroke on Coats Island in Hudson Bay. The whalers then discovered a band of Inuit who were said to have spoken a "strange dialect" and were called Sadlermiut.[9]

The Sadlermiut continued to establish contact with Westerners. However, as with many North American aboriginals, the Sadlermiut were often susceptible to Western diseases. By 1896, there were only 70 of them remaining. Then, in the fall of 1902, a British trading/whaling[10] vessel named the Active had made a stop at Cape Low,[12] Southampton Island. It is said that some of the Sadlermiut caught a disease, possibly an influenza,[11] typhoid, or typhus, from a sick sailor aboard the Active, which then spread to the entire community.[6][9] By the winter 1902-03, the entire Sadlermiut population except for a woman and four children had died.[5][10]

In 1954 and 1955, Henry B. Collins of the Smithsonian Institution studied Inuit house ruins in the Canadian Arctic.[12] He determined that the ruins found at Native Point were characteristic of Sadlermiut culture which had once been quite extensive. He also found evidence that the Sadlermiut were the last remnants of the Dorset culture.[13]

Origins

The Sadlermiut are most often cited for having maintained a unique culture and dialect apart from other Inuit, similar to the Unangam (Aleut), which is principally the result of an adaptation to environmental and historical constraints,[20] whereas they show a closer genetic profile to paleo-Eskimo groups than neo-Eskimos groups.[14] Because of this, various theories have been established to try to explain the Sadlermiut's cultural differences. One of these has tried to establish a clear link between the Sadlermiut as direct descendants of the Dorset culture. Another theory explains that rather than being related to the Dorset, the Sadlermiut were in fact descendants of the Thule, whose geographically isolated culture would have developed idiosyncratically from the mainland Thule culture. A third theory indicates that the Sadlermiut did not necessarily belong to either group, but because of intermarriage, their roots may have in fact been part of both Dorset and Thule cultures.[5][15]

In the 21st century, human mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) research[16] on skeletal remains has seemed to show a genetic relationship between the Sadlermiut and various other related ethnic groups. An incorrect association led many to conclude the Sadlermiut were of Dorset and Thule ancestry due to apparent haplogroups A (46%) and D (54%) found in skeletal remains, attributed to the Thule (A 100%) and Dorset (D 100%) cultures respectively.[25] This evidence, along with statistical differences, led to the errant belief that the Sadlermiut would have been remnants of the Dorset culture, with more recent gene flow from the Thule,[17] providing further evidence for a cultural displacement between the two groups approximately one thousand years ago.[18][19] Similarly, the same percentage of the presence of both haplogroup A and D was discovered among paleo-Aleut skeletal remains, while it also discovered D 27% and A 73% among the "Neo-Aleut" population.[18] This inconsistency may be attributed to the fact that a population displacement did not occur within the Aleutian Islands between the Dorset and Thule transition,[19] meaning that the Sadlermiut may have not in fact been the very last remnants of the Dorset culture.

Further studies show there is no genetic evidence to show a direct Dorset ancestry, but there is evidence to show both cultures may have shared an earlier common Siberian ancestry.[20]

Lifestyle

The Sadlermiut were a hunter-gatherer people whose subsistence relied primarily on fishing and caribou hunting, although they also hunted seals, polar bears, and walruses.[21] Unlike the mainland Inuit, the Sadlermiut were reported to show very little interest in hunting whales and trapping and were thus of little use to traders who frequented Coral Harbour.[5][22] In addition, the Sadlermiut often kept a "vigilant distance" between themselves and the traders, the explorers and the Aivilingmiut.[23] This may be in part due to historical confrontations with the Aivilingmiut who sought Southampton Island for its prosperous whaling potential, and the Dene peoples who moved northwards during the summer in pursuit of caribou.[22]

Language

The Sadlermiut language is unknown, but appears to have been significantly different than that of their mainland neighbours.[24] The neighbouring Inuit reported that they used "baby talk", but it is not clear if this means they spoke a distinct variety of Inuit language, or that they used pidgin Inuktitut as a contact language.[25]

References

1. ^{{cite book | last = Bumsted | first = J.M | title = A History of the Canadian Peoples | edition=3 | publisher = Oxford University Press | year = 2007 | isbn = 978-0-19-542349-5 | page = 6}}
2. ^{{cite book|author=Aleš Hrdlička|title=Contribution to the Anthropology of Central and Smith Sound Eskimo|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0SsTAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA179|year=1910|publisher=The Trustees|page=181}}
3. ^{{cite web | first=David | last=Dalby | date=1994–2006 | url=http://www.langtag.com/INUITIC_JUNE_2006.pdf | publisher=The LinguaSphere Online | title=Zone [60] Inuitic | accessdate=2008-04-23 }}{{dead link|date=May 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
4. ^{{cite book | last = Petrone | first = Penny | title = Northern Voices: Inuit Writing in English | publisher = University of Toronto Press | year = 1988 | pages = 12–14 | isbn = 978-0-8020-7717-2}}
5. ^{{cite web | first=Jean L. | last=Briggs |author2=J. Garth Taylor | publisher=Historica Foundation of Canada | title=The Canadian Encyclopedia: Sadlermiut Inuit| url =http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/en/article/sadlermiut-inuit/| accessdate=2008-03-21}}
6. ^{{cite web | publisher=The Free Library | title=The People Arrive| url =http://www.thefreelibrary.com/The+People+Arrive.(history+of+the+Inuit)-a057040631| date=1999-03-01 | accessdate=2008-03-22}}
7. ^{{cite web | publisher=Live Science | title=No Descendants Are Left From the First Eskimos | url =http://www.livescience.com/47604-first-american-arctic-people-genetics.html| date= 2014-08-28 | accessdate=2015-09-21}}
8. ^{{Cite journal |last=Raghavan |first=Maanasa |last2=DeGiorgio |first2=Michael |last3=Albrechtsen |first3=Anders |last4=Moltke |first4=Ida |last5=Skoglund |first5=Pontus |last6=Korneliussen |first6=Thorfinn S.|last7=Grønnow |first7=Bjarne |last8=Appelt |first8=Martin |last9=Gulløv |first9=Hans Christian |date=2014-08-29 |title=The genetic prehistory of the New World Arctic |url=http://science.sciencemag.org/content/345/6200/1255832 |journal=Science |language=en |volume=345 |issue=6200 |pages=1255832 |doi=10.1126/science.1255832 |issn=0036-8075 |pmid=25170159}}
9. ^{{cite news |url=http://www.nunatsiaq.com/archives/nunavut020705/news/editorial/columns.html#nunani_july26 |title=In the bones of the world (Part eight) |work=Nortext Publishing Corporation (Iqaluit) |publisher=Nunatsiaq News |date=2002-07-26 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20050328183720/http://www.nunatsiaq.com/archives/nunavut020705/news/editorial/columns.html#nunani_july26 |archivedate=2005-03-28 |df= }}
10. ^{{cite web| publisher=Library and Archives Canada| title=Aboriginal 7 - Life in Canada| url=http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/art/050602/0506020222_e.html| accessdate=2008-03-21| deadurl=yes| archiveurl=https://archive.is/20120804215759/http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/art/050602/0506020222_e.html| archivedate=2012-08-04| df=}}
11. ^{{cite web| first=M.A.P.| last=Renouf| publisher=The Rooms| title=Museum Notes - Palaeoeskimo in Newfoundland & Labrador| url=http://www.therooms.ca/museum/mnotes5.asp| date=Fall 1991| accessdate=2008-03-21| deadurl=yes| archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080430095710/http://www.therooms.ca/museum/mnotes5.asp| archivedate=2008-04-30| df=}}
12. ^{{cite book | title=American Antiquity | volume=23 | year=1957 | publisher=Society for American Archaeology | page=97}}
13. ^{{cite book | publisher=National Geographic Magazine | title=Vanished Mystery Men of Hudson Bay | first=Henry B. | last=Collins | volume=Vol. CX No. 5 | year=1956 | page=674}}
14. ^{{cite web | first=Niels | last=Lynnerup |author2=Jørgen Meldgaard |author3=Jan Jakobsen |author4=Martin Appelt |author5=Anders Koch |author6=Bruno Frøhlich | publisher=Arctic Institute of North America | title=Human Dorset Remains from Igloolik, Canada | url =http://pubs.aina.ucalgary.ca/arctic/Arctic56-4-349.pdf| year=2003 | accessdate=2008-03-21}}
15. ^{{cite news | publisher=Revista de Arqueología Americana | title=Canadian Arctic historical archaeology in review| url =http://www.accessmylibrary.com/coms2/summary_0286-32018819_ITM| accessdate=2008-03-21 | date=2004-01-01}}
16. ^{{cite web | url = http://sci.tech-archive.net/Archive/sci.anthropology/2004-07/1342.html | first = Floyd L. | last = Davidson | date =2004-04-26 | accessdate =2008-10-13| title =Re: Barrow Boy gibberish...}}
17. ^{{cite web | url=http://groups.google.com.au/group/alt.culture.alaska/msg/93a80e2d7ed7cfb9| title=The Aleuts | first=G. | last=Horvat | date=2004-03-11 | accessdate=2008-10-13}}
18. ^{{cite web | url=http://www.physanth.org/annmeet/aapa2001/ajpasuppl32.pdf | title=Ancestor descendant relationships in North American Arctic prehistory: Ancient DNA evidence from the Aleutian Islands and the Eastern Canadian Arctic. | accessdate=2008-10-13 | first=M.G. | last=Hayes | year=2001 | archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070305183240/http://www.physanth.org/annmeet/aapa2001/ajpasuppl32.pdf | archivedate=2007-03-05}}
19. ^{{cite web| url=http://www.mnh.si.edu/arctic/html/pdf/news02.pdf | title = Arctic Studies Center Newsletter | accessdate=2008-10-13 |date=June 2002 | publisher=Smithsonian Institution | work=National Museum of Natural History}}
20. ^{{cite web | url=https://www.thestar.com/news/world/2014/08/28/ancient_tooth_dna_sheds_light_on_origins_of_arctic_peop.html| title=Ancient tooth DNA sheds light on origins of Arctic peoples | date=2014-08-28 | accessdate=2015-09-21}}
21. ^{{cite web | first=John N. | last=Harris | date=1999–2004 | url=http://www.spirasolaris.ca/sbb4g1bv2.html | title=The Way West: The Blocked Passage | accessdate=2008-04-23}}
22. ^{{cite web | publisher=Indian and Northern Affairs Canada | title=5. Inuit Innovation | url =http://pubs.aina.ucalgary.ca/arctic/Arctic56-4-349.pdf | year=2006 | accessdate=2008-04-23}}
23. ^{{cite book | last = Mitchell | first = Marybelle | title = From Talking Chiefs to a Native Corporate Elite: The Birth of Class and Nationalism Among Canadian Inuit | publisher = McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP | year = 1996 | isbn = 978-0-7735-1374-7 | page = 469}}
24. ^Canadian Encyclopedia: Sadlermiut Inuit
25. ^Peter Dawson, The Possibility of Contact Between Dorset and Thule

External links

  • {{cite web|author=Charles F. Merbs |title=Patterns of Activity-Induced Pathology in a Canadian Inuit Population |url=http://www.civilization.ca/cmc/archeo/emercury/119.htm |publisher=Archaeological Survey of Canada - Mercury Series |work=civilization.ca |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20051207020302/http://www.civilization.ca/cmc/archeo/emercury/119.htm |archivedate=December 7, 2005 }}
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20050328183720/http://www.nunatsiaq.com/archives/nunavut020705/news/editorial/columns.html In the bones of the world] at the Nuntsiaq News website.
  • Article on the Sadlermiut from the Canadian encyclopedia
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20050924031440/http://www.civilization.ca/cmc/archeo/cvh/arctic/earc7.htm Dorset Paleoeskimo Culture] at Civilization.ca.
  • The Way West: Blocked Passage, by John N. Harris
  • Tooth wear and sexual division of labour in an Inuit population, by Shannon Raye Wood

6 : Indigenous peoples in Northern Canada|Archaeological cultures of North America|Inuit history|Archaeology of Canada|Indigenous peoples in the Arctic|Extinct ethnic groups

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