Pallirmiut were a geographically defined Copper Inuit group in the Canadian Arctic territory of Nunavut.[1] They were located by the mouth of the Rae River (Pallirk) during the spring. Some stayed there during summers, while others joined the Kogluktogmiut at the Bloody Falls summer salmon fishery. Pallirmiut wintered on west central Coronation Gulf, and went inland when the snow was gone, carrying packs rather than using sleds.[2]
^Stefansson, Vilhjalmur (1914). The Stefánsson-Anderson Arctic Expedition of the American Museum: Preliminary Ethnological Report. New York: The Trustees of the American Museum. pp. 26–31. OCLC 13626409.
^Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History. New York, NY: American Museum of Natural History. 1919. pp. 4–303. OCLC 1116815.
Pallirmiut were a geographically defined Copper Inuit group in the Canadian Arctic territory of Nunavut. They were located by the mouth of the Rae River...
Union Strait to the mainland: north of Rae River, south of Lambert Island Pallirmiut: mouth of the Rae River (Pallirk) and head of Dease River; Coronation...
(also known as Uallirgmiut) (located at the river's headwaters) and the Pallirmiut (located at the river's mouth). The Rae River is named in honour of Scottish...
showed that the subgroups of Akuliakattagmiut, Haneragmiut, Kogluktogmiut, Pallirmiut, Puiplirmiut, and Uallirgmiut {also known as the Kanianermiut} were mixed...
showed that the subgroups of Akuliakattagmiut, Haneragmiut, Kogluktogmiut, Pallirmiut, Puiplirmiut, and Uallirgmiut (also known as the Kanianermiut) mixed through...
Jenness and they include: Akuliakattagmiut Haneragmiut Kogluktogmiut Pallirmiut Puiplirmiut Uallirgmiut (Kanianermiut) In his article in Geographical...