Ojibwa
North Americahunter-gatherersMap
expand_more Description
The Ojibwa communities range from southern and northwestern Ontario, northern Michigan and Wisconsin, and Minnesota, to North Dakota and southern and central Manitoba and Saskatchewan. The four main Ojibwa groups are the Northern Ojibwa, or Saulteaux; the Plains Ojibwa, or Bungi; the southeastern Ojibwa; and the southwestern Chippewa. The Ojibwa economy was mixed, combining fishing, hunting, and gathering with gardening (in the south) and trade, particularly the fur trade. The Plains Ojibwa turned more to bison hunting. By the 1850s, their land base and population had been severely reduced by United States removal policies, disease, and the overall pressures of heavy European American settlement, especially in more southern areas.
Identifier
Region
- North America
Subregion
- Arctic and Subarctic
Subsistence Type
- hunter-gatherers
Samples
Countries
- Canada
- United States
External Links
- Northern Saulteaux (Binford Hunter-Gatherer) D-PLACE
- Pekangekum (Binford Hunter-Gatherer) D-PLACE
- Nipigon (Binford Hunter-Gatherer) D-PLACE
- Rainy River Ojibwe (Binford Hunter-Gatherer) D-PLACE
- Eastern Ojibwa (Binford Hunter-Gatherer) D-PLACE
- Bungi (Binford Hunter-Gatherer) D-PLACE
- Northern Saulteaux (Ethnographic Atlas) D-PLACE
- Pekangekum (Ethnographic Atlas) D-PLACE
- Nipigon (Ethnographic Atlas) D-PLACE
- Minnesota Ojibwa (Ethnographic Atlas) D-PLACE
- Rainy River Ojibwe (Ethnographic Atlas) D-PLACE
- Eastern Ojibwa (Ethnographic Atlas) D-PLACE
- Bungi (Ethnographic Atlas) D-PLACE
- Northern Saulteaux (Standard Cross-Cultural Sample) D-PLACE