A group of young northern Indigenous (Dogrib) boys sitting and standing in front of a wooden building [Hudson's Bay Company trading post] at Great Slave Lake.
An image of an Indigenous man packing goods on his back; he is on a path through bushy terrain.
A view of two men seated in kayaks on water; each holds a paddle. A printed inscription on the front of the photo reads: "The kayak is made of seal skin, and is about 16 feet long with only sufficient room for one man".
A family standing outside their teepee; an inscription on the front of the photograph notes that "the man holds in his hand what is called a snow knife, made from a file to cut blocks of snow in making snow huts".
Copy of EB-12
A family standing outside their teepee; an inscription on the front of the photograph notes that "the man holds in his hand what is called a snow knife, made from a file to cut blocks of snow in making snow huts".
Copy of EB-12
A view of wooden buildings, a teepee, and people in the community of Fort McPherson. The following is inscribed on front of the image: "It is on [Peel] River within the Arctic Circle, 2000 miles north of Edmonton. The midnight sun shines here for about two weeks. The Esquimaux quite frequently come as far south [as] McPherson to trade."
A group of Indigenous men and traders landing the Hudson's Bay Company fur boats at the foot of the rapid on the Athabasca River in preparation for portaging.
A group of Indigenous individuals, including men, women and children, beaching their birch bark canoes and unloading supplies for trade at Fort Resolution on Great Slave Lake.
A group of Indigenous men packing goods on the ice along the Athabasca River.
Same as EA-10-2823
Indigenous individuals unloading supplies at Great Slave Lake that have been received from Fort Resolution. Includes sleds in the foreground and teepee in the background.
Same as EA-10-8