M.L. Deed. “Intersections: A Twenty-day Journal of the Unexpected.” http://arteonline.arq.br/
library.htmD. Anderson,
“Re: Further response to Robert (Segal)’s Further Response.” International Association for Jungian Studies discussion list.
April 25, 2007.J. Diamond, Collapse. New York, 2005.M. McGrath, The Long Exile: A tale of Inuit Betrayal and Survival in the High Arctic. New York, 2007."Don Holman, a Sioux... who went north to teach stone lithography to Inuit craftsmen of Holman Island said: 'That damn place where the Canadian Government men chose to build a settlement of mobile homes for the native population was so windy that the crows spun on the electrical wires like pinwheels.'” B. Smyle.
Email, 5 Aug 07
By the 11th Century, Vikings had settled on the shores of Greenland, and "as soon as they arrived, they burned woodlands to clear land for pasture, then cut down some of the remaining trees for purposes such as lumber and firewood." In the 17th Century,explorers, whalers, and fur trappers were regularly plying Arctic waters, ice, and turf. In that century, too, it's fur has been torn and thin, ribs showing. And almost always, it comes through the yard in a herd. In the early weeks, other deer would nuzzle its head, shoulders, lick its back. Sometimes the wounded deer would trail behind the others. But always, even a year later, Basque whalers sailed home to Europe with Eskimo,