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- catalog abstract "Bibliography:p.263-71.".
- catalog contributor b720885.
- catalog created "[1972]".
- catalog date "1972".
- catalog date "[1972]".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "[1972]".
- catalog description "Bibliography: p. [263]-271.".
- catalog description "Bibliography:p.263-71.".
- catalog description "The Russians seek the "great land" and thereby arouse the Spaniards to reconsider the Northern boundary of "Alta California" -- Captain Cook's third voyage to the Pacific Ocean arrives at Nootka Sound -- The challenge of the Coast south of Nootka: the Strait of Juan de Fuca and the Columbia River -- The inside passage, where the Spaniards in the Sutil and the Mexicana proceed more slowly and Vancouver Island -- The Haida, the shrewdest of traders, who set the style for demands for trade goods -- The aggressive Tlingit, who discouraged Vancouver's surveying and stood off the Russians for half a decade -- The northernmost reaches, with the Chugach of Prince William Sound, the Athapascans of Cook Inlet, and the Aleut and Russians at Unalaska.".
- catalog extent "xiv, 277 p.".
- catalog identifier "0226310884".
- catalog issued "1972".
- catalog issued "[1972]".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Chicago, University of Chicago Press".
- catalog spatial "Northwest Coast of North America".
- catalog spatial "Northwest Coast of North America.".
- catalog subject "970.4/95".
- catalog subject "E78.N78 G818".
- catalog subject "Indians of North America Northwest Coast of North America History 18th century.".
- catalog subject "Indians of North America Northwest Coast of North America.".
- catalog tableOfContents "The Russians seek the "great land" and thereby arouse the Spaniards to reconsider the Northern boundary of "Alta California" -- Captain Cook's third voyage to the Pacific Ocean arrives at Nootka Sound -- The challenge of the Coast south of Nootka: the Strait of Juan de Fuca and the Columbia River -- The inside passage, where the Spaniards in the Sutil and the Mexicana proceed more slowly and Vancouver Island -- The Haida, the shrewdest of traders, who set the style for demands for trade goods -- The aggressive Tlingit, who discouraged Vancouver's surveying and stood off the Russians for half a decade -- The northernmost reaches, with the Chugach of Prince William Sound, the Athapascans of Cook Inlet, and the Aleut and Russians at Unalaska.".
- catalog title "Indian life on the Northwest coast of North America, as seen by the early explorers and fur traders during the last decades of the eighteenth century.".
- catalog type "History. fast".
- catalog type "text".