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List of Figures
Figure 0.1: ACFN Elders discuss the report draft and book project at the ACFN 2022 Elders’ Meeting, Fort Chipewyan. Photo by Peter Fortna, June 2022.
Figure 0.2: Map of Park Boundaries. Map produced by Emily Boak, Willow Springs Strategic Solutions, 2021.
Figure 0.3: Map of lands taken up within ACFN’s core homelands in what is now Alberta. Map produced by Michael Robson, Willow Springs Strategic Solutions, 17 July 2023.
Figure 0.4: View of Lake Athabasca from Fort Chipewyan. Photo by Peter Fortna, 2018.
Figure 1.1: Hudson’s Bay Company post, Fort Chipewyan, Alberta, 1919. Source: CU1108601, Courtesy of Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.
Figure 1.2: Map of settlements at House Lake & Peace Point. Map produced by Emily Boak, Willow Springs Strategic Solutions, 2021.
Figure 1.3: A Dene encampment at Fort Chipewyan, ca. pre-1921. Source: CU1108812, Courtesy of Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.
Figure 1.4: Map of places of cultural importance taken up by the Wood Buffalo National Park. Map produced by Emily Boak and Michael Robson, Willow Springs Strategic Solutions, 2023.
Figure 1.5: Ester Adam (née Piché), Drying Fish. Trap-line, Ft. Chipewyan, Summer 1952. Source - Provincial Archives of Alberta, A17153
Figure 2.1: Map of Treaty 8. Map produced by Emily Boak, Willow Springs Strategic Solutions, 2021.
Figure 2.2: ACFN Members gather for Treaty Days, Fort Chipewyan in June 2018. Photo by Peter Fortna.
Figure 3.1: Map of the original Park Boundaries. 1922. LAC RG85 Vol. 1390, File 406-13.
Figure 3.2: F.H. Kitto’s map of proposed boundaries for a bison preserve. F.H. Kitto to J.B. Harkin, 12 January 1921. LAC RG85, Vol. 1390, File 406-13.
Figure 3.3: Buffalo scow unloading at Peace River, 1925. Source: Provincial Archives of Alberta, A4723.
Figure 3.4: First shipment of 200 Wainwright Bison arrives, 1925. Source: CU1103322, Courtesy of Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.
Figure 3.5: Buffalo calves unloaded and heading west at Peace Point along 7 miles timber cut to open lands, 1925. Source: Provincial Archives of Alberta, A4727.
Figure 3.6: Summary of Warden Dempsey’s report re: Buffalo - Map showing location of Buffalo that have left the Park up to 6th Jan. 26. April 1926. RG85-D-1-A, Vol 1391, File 406-13.
Figure 3.7: Map of permitting zones A, B, and C established to differentiate among access rights for harvesting after the 1926 expansion. Map produced by Emily Boak, Willow Springs Strategic Solutions, 2021.
Figure 5.1: Camp for police dogs and Wood Buffalo park warden’s dogs, 1952. Source: A17163, Provincial Archives of Alberta.
Figure 5.2: Map of Warden Dempsey’s Patrol, including sites checked. Attachment to a memo from Hume to Rowatt, 28 March, 1933. RG85-D-1-A, Vol. 152, File 420-2.
Figure 6.1: Photo of Chief Jonas Laviolette, Ft. Chipewyan. 1948-1954, Source - Provincial Archives of Alberta A17118.
Figure 6.2: Photo of ACFN’s Flag, Fort Chipewyan. Photo by Peter Fortna, at ACFN Elders’ Meeting June 2022.
Figure 6.3: Map of ACFN IR201 Reserves. Map produced by Emily Boak, Willow Springs Strategic Solutions, 2021.
Figure 6.4: Map of the boundaries of the preserve set by 1935 Order-in-Council 298-35. Map Produced by Emily Boak, Willow Springs Strategic Solutions, 2021.
Figure 6.5: A Round Dance at ACFN’s Treaty Days, 2018. Fort Chipewyan. Photo by Peter Fortna.