Akuliakattagmiut were a geographically defined Copper Inuit subgroup in the Canadian territory of Nunavut.[1] They were located near Cape Bexley on the south shore, mainland side of Dolphin and Union Strait,[2] and in the vicinity of the Melville Hills' Akuliakattak Lake, the source of the Rae River.[3]
^Stefansson, Vilhjalmur (1914). The Stefánsson-Anderson Arctic Expedition of the American Museum: Preliminary Ethnological Report. New York: The Trustees of the American Museum. p. 26. OCLC 13626409.
^"II. Central Eskimo". canadiangenealogy.net. Archived from the original on 2 October 2008. Retrieved 2008-10-31.
^Stefansson, V. (1914-12-30). "Prehistoric and Present Commerce among the Arctic Coast Eskimo". Geological Survey Museum Bulletin. 6: 14.
Akuliakattagmiut were a geographically defined Copper Inuit subgroup in the Canadian territory of Nunavut. They were located near Cape Bexley on the south...
not eat seal and caribou at the same meal, Pallirmiut did, as did Akuliakattagmiut, Kangiryuarmiut, Kogluktogmiut, Nagyuktogmiut, Noahonirmiut, and Puiplirmiut...
to the south on the mainland with another Cape Bexley subgroup, the Akuliakattagmiut, while other Haneragmiut migrated as far north as Tahiryuak Lake to...
documented by Stefansson, Franz Boas, and others: Ahiagmiut: Ogden Bay Akuliakattagmiut: Cape Bexley Asiagmiut: Ogden Bay Ekalluktogmiut: Ekalluk River, Albert...
Nicholas Vansittart, 1st Baron Bexley. It is the ancestral home of the Akuliakattagmiut, a Copper Inuit subgroup. Haneragmiut camped here, too, and Nagyuktogmiut...
Studies by anthropologist Diamond Jenness showed that the subgroups of Akuliakattagmiut, Haneragmiut, Kogluktogmiut, Pallirmiut, Puiplirmiut, and Uallirgmiut...
) Several subgroups were reported on by Jenness and they include: Akuliakattagmiut Haneragmiut Kogluktogmiut Pallirmiut Puiplirmiut Uallirgmiut (Kanianermiut)...