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- Athabaskan languages - Wikipedia
The four spellings— Athabaskan, Athabascan, Athapaskan, and Athapascan —are in approximately equal use Particular communities may prefer one spelling over another (Krauss 1987)
- Athabaskan Nations - Indigenous People
Athabaskan or Athabascan (also Dene, Athapascan, Athapaskan, Athabasca Indians or Athapaskes) is the name of a large group of closely related indigenous peoples of North America, located in two main Southern and Northern groups in western North America, and of their language family
- Athabaskan language family | History, Characteristics Dialects . . .
Athabaskan language family, one of the largest North American Indian language families, consisting of about 38 languages
- Athabascan Culture in Alaska
Athabascan territory ranges from the Brooks Range in northern Interior Alaska to Cook Inlet in Southcentral Alaska, and from Norton Sound in the west to the Canadian border in the east and beyond There are 11 distinct languages among the varying groups of Athabascans
- Alaskan People: Alaska Athabascan Tribe
There are 229 federally recognized Alaskan villages and five unrecognized Tlingit Alaskan Indian tribes The Athabascan people call themselves ‘Dena,’ or ‘the people ’ They speak eleven different languages The Athabascan people traditionally lived along five Alaskan rivers: the Yukon, the Tanana, the Susitna, the Kuskokwim, and the Copper River
- Athapaskan Indians - The Oregon Encyclopedia
The Athapaskans lived in the valleys on the Rogue and Illinois rivers, where the land is steep and mountainous, and along the northern California and southern Oregon coasts Many made their homes along the Coquille and Umpqua Rivers
- Athabascan Cultures - Alaska Natives
Athabascan Indians live in interior Alaska and have the largest land base of any other Alaska Native group The Athabascan are efficient hunters and fishers and the moose, caribou, salmon and the birch tree are the most important resources These provide food, clothes and shelter
- Athapascan Family - Legends of America
Albert Gallatin assigned the name Athabaskan to the language in his 1836 classification of the languages of North America The vast differences in physical type and culture, as well as the differences in language, point to a long separation of the family, likely spanning many centuries
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