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Dene Tha' ("Slavey") [archive]

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Dene Tha' ("Slavey")

There are about twenty tribes in Canada that speak dialects of the Athapaskan or Na-Dene language family. The Slavey live between Lake Athabasca and Great Slave Lake, and on the southern portion of the Mackenzie River. They live in government-created, modern settlements in the Canadian Northwest Territories. Traditional Slavey Settlement Patterns and Lifeways

The Slavey traditionally relied on migratory animals such as caribou, fish and water fowl for much of their food. Their semi-nomadic way of life was due to the scattered and seasonal occurrence of these migratory animals, along with small game species that were trapped in deadfalls and snares in their home territories. Moose and bear were also abundant in the marshy woodland territory that the Slavey occupied. They would hunt the moose by imitating a moose call using a birch bark tube or by rubbing a large bone or piece of antler against a tree trunk to imitate the male moose. When a moose came to investigate the hunter killed the animal with a bow and arrow. The animals were also hunted when the snow was deep and covered with a thick crust of ice. The hunter would run the moose to exhaustion by wearing snowshoes and run atop the ice where the moose broke through the crust and tired easily. It could then be taken easily with a bow and arrow or spear. The most common way, however, was to herd moose or caribou into a fenced area – a corral, compound or surround – where snares were set to trap the animals (Crowe 1974).

Fishing was also very important to the Slavey and in fact, as is the case for all Subarctic Indians, fish were their staple food. They aggregated in the summer in large fish camps along major rivers or lakes where they then used nets made of willow bark to catch, clean and dry large quantities fish. They dispersed in the winter to small fish lakes where they lived in small family bands of no more than two or three closely-related nuclear families. At these winter camps they netted fish under the thick winter ice, they trapped small game, and they occasionally hunted solitary moose with bow and arrow (ibid., Allen 1998, Siddon 1990).

The Slavey were primarily occupied with day-to-day survival and a need to move constantly due to their harsh environment, and because of this their social organization took a simple form. They were divided into several regional bands, which consisted of independent local bands divided into different family groups who worked together. These family groups were called “nodal kindreds” (Allen 1998). Each family band hunted in its own separate territory where boundaries were defined by tradition and use (ibid.).

The Slavey were an Athapaskan-speaking, nomadic, band-level people who lived in the harsh climate of Subarctic northern Canada. This environment shaped the way they subsisted and organized themselves both spatially and socially. They are often thought of as people of the caribou or moose but in fact were people of the fish, for it was fish that were their staple food and therefore the primary constraint in their lives (Vanstone 1974, Asch 1988, Morrison & Wilson 1986, Leechman 1956, Jenness 1977) .

Additional Reading

 Athabaskans
 Dene Tha
 Slave Language
 First Nations of Canada



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