Page:Historic highways of America (Volume 7).djvu/98

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CHAPTER II

NEW ENGLAND–CANADIAN PORTAGES

THE territory lying between the St. Lawrence River and the Atlantic seaboard offers an unexcelled field for the study of portage paths and their part in the history of the continent. The student of this branch of archæology finds at his disposal the admirable studies of Dr. William F. Ganong, which cover an important portion of this field.[1] From these studies (the best published account) the following general statements concerning Indian routes of travel are very enlightening:

"The Indians of New Brunswick, like others of North America, were, within certain limits, great wanderers. For hunting, war, or treaty making, they passed incessantly not only throughout their own

  1. A Monograph of Historic Sites in the Province of New Brunswick, Transactions of the Royal Society of Canada, vol. v, sec. ii, pp. 213–357.