"Keenebonanoh Keemoshominook Kaeshe Peemishikhik Odaskiwakh -We Stand on the Graves of Our Ancestors: Native Interpretations of Treaty No. 9 with Attawapiskat Elders." MA Thesis
Peteborough: Trent University.
Knudtson, Peter and David Suzuki, 1992
Wisdom of the Elders.
Toronto, ON: Stoddart Publishing Co. Limited.
Long, John S, 1978
Treaty No. 9: The Indian Petitions, 1889-1927.
Cobalt, ON: Highway Book Shop.
Long, John S, 1978
Treaty No. 9: The Negotiations, 1901-1928.
Cobalt, ON: Highway Book Shop, 1978.
Long, John S, 1985
Treaty No. 9 and fur trade company families: northeastern Ontario's Indians, halfbreeds, petitioners and Métis. In The new peoples: being and becoming Métis in America, Jacqueline Peterson & Jennifer S.H. Brown eds.
Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press, pp. 137-162.
Long, John S, 1989
"No Basis for Argument: The Signing of Treaty Nine in Northern Ontario, 1905-1906."
Native Studies Review 5, no. 2: 19-54.
Long, John S, 1993
"The Government is Asking you For Your Land": The Treaty Made in 1905 at Fort Albany According to Cree Oral Tradition. Schumacher: John Long.
Long, John S, 1996
"Who Got What At Winisk?"
Beaver 75, no. 1: 23-31.
Long, John S, 2006
How the Commissioners Explained Treaty Number Nine to the Ojibway and Cree in 1905. Ontario History.
Vol XCVIII: (1) 1-29.
Louttit, Elder Agnes, 2008
Personal communication about starvation experience.
Moose Factory: Home residence.
Macklem, Patrick, 1997
"The Impact of Treaty 9 on Natural Resource Development in Northern Ontario." In Aboriginal and Treaty Rights in Canada: Essays on Law, Equity, and Respect for Difference, ed. Michael Asch, 97-134.
Vancouver: UBC Press published in association with the Centre for Constitutional Studies, University of Alberta.
McDonald Miriam, Arragutainaq Lucassie, and Zack Novalinga, 1997
Voices from the Bay: Traditional Ecological Knowledge of Inuit and Cree in the Hudson Bay bioregion.
Ottawa, Ontario: Canadian Arctic Resources Committee and Environmental Committee of the Municipality of Sanikiluaq.
Morrison, James, 1986
Treaty Research Report: Treaty Nine (1905-06).
Ottawa: Treaties and Historical Research Centre, Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development.
Nishnawbe-Aski Nation, 1986
A History of the Cree and Ojibway of Northern Ontario.
Treaty No. Nine Commissioner Duncan Campbell Scott https://www.pathoftheelders.com/templates/pote/images/essay/chapter4b_big.jpg (05/17/08) The James Bay Treaty signing party at Fort Albany. Standing: Joseph L. Vanasse (L), James Parkinson (R) of NWMP. Seated: Commissioners Samuel Stewart (L), Daniel McMartin, Duncan Campbell Scott (R) Foreground: HBC Chief Trader Thomas. 1905. Digital Image Number: I0010627.jpg Duncan Campbell Scott Fonds Item Reference Code: C 275-2-0-1 (S 7546) Archives of Ontario.
Blind Chief Missabay addressing the assembly before the feast held after the James Bay Treaty signing ceremony, Osnaburgh House, July12, 1905 http://ao.minisisinc.com/WEBIMAGES/I0010717.jpg (05/17/08) Duncan Campbell Scott fonds. Item Reference Code: C 275-1-0-2 (S 7600). Archives of Ontario.
The signing of the Treaty at Winisk, Ontario. Left to right, standing: Father Martel, Indians John Bird, Xavier Patrick and David Sutherland, Dr. O'Gorman and J. Harris, H.B. Co. Post Manager. Seated: Commissioners Walter C. Cain and H. N. Awrey. July 28, 1930. (05/17/08) https://www.pathoftheelders.com/templates/pote/images/essay/chapter4g_big.jpg Library and Archives of Canada. PA-094963