Ebook on Traditional Animal Foods in Northern North America
CINE's co-director, Murray Humphries, and CINE's founding director, Harriet Kuhnlein, co-authored an ebookÌýdescribing and referencing the published literature on the contributions of wildlife diversity to the subsistence and nutrition of Indigenous cultures of northern North America.ÌýThis web publication has the purpose to describe and to reference the published literature on traditional animal foods known and used by Indigenous Peoples of northern North America.ÌýIn sum, itÌýpresents data forÌý527 species of animals, drawing information from over 490 ethnographic sources, an additional 91 unique sources reporting nutritional information, and 357 sources containing basic biological information.Ìý
Traditional Plant Foods Book
The primary purpose of this book is to describe and to reference the published literature, as of 1990, on the nutritional properties, the botanical characteristics and uses of traditional food plants by the Indigenous Peoples of Canada. With permission of the publisher this book was scanned and is available on the website of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations via this link
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Complete reference:
Traditional Plant Foods of Canadian Indigenous Peoples: Nutrition, Botany and Use. Harriet V. Kuhnlein and Nancy J. Turner. 1991. Gordon and Breach Science Publishers
References on how to update the publication contents are given here.
This publication is also available fromÌý
Indigenous Peoples’ food systems: the many dimensions of culture, diversity and environment for nutrition and healthÌý
This book presents 12 case studies from different parts of the world. It demonstrates the wealth of Indigenous knowledge of their food systems, its richness, strengths, nutritional impact, and how people think about and use these foods. This is a multidisciplinary work in partnership with communities. This research provides tools on how to document Indigenous food systems and implement health promotion interventions using relevant elements of their local food systemsÌý