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©
December 2011, The Fan Hitch, all rights
reserved
revised: January 2014 I. Introduction A. The Inuit
Dog’s place in the natural world
B. The Inuit Dog is not a wolf! C. Dangerous confusion A.
The Name Controversy
B. Defining 'Purity' C. Mistaken Identity: Promoting a breed vs. avoiding extinction D. The Belyaev Experiment E. Summary A.
Ancient history
B. Recent history: The Inuit Dog in service to nations 1.
Exploration
2. War 3. Sovereignty C. Population
decline
A.
In the North
B. Below the tree line A. Inherited
diseases
B. Disease prevention and access to veterinary services A. Appearance
VII.
The Inuit Dog in Scientific Research, Films
andB. Behavior C. Performance D. The big picture in Print VIII. Acknowledgements Appendix 1: Partial list of scientific publications about the Inuit Dog Appendix 2: Selected (alphabetical) list of other resources with a focus on Inuit Dogs Appendix 3: A small sampling of other resources of interest Navigating This Site Index of articles by subject Index of back issues by volume number Search The Fan Hitch Articles to download and print Defining the Inuit Dog Ordering Ken MacRury's Thesis Our comprehensive list of resources About The Fan Hitch Talk to The Fan Hitch The Fan Hitch home page
The Fan Hitch,
Journal of the Inuit Sled Dog, is published
four times a year. It is available at no
cost online at: https://thefanhitch.org.
The Fan Hitch welcomes your letters, stories, comments and suggestions. The editorial staff reserves the right to edit submissions used for publication. Contents of The Fan Hitch are protected by international copyright laws. No photo, drawing or text may be reproduced in any form without written consent. Webmasters please note: written consent is necessary before linking this site to yours! Please forward requests to Sue Hamilton, 55 Town Line Rd., Harwinton, Connecticut 06791, USA or mail@thefanhitch.org This site is dedicated to the Inuit Dog as well as related Inuit culture and traditions. It is also home to The Fan Hitch, Journal of the Inuit Sled Dog. |
![]() They just keep pulling! Spring in North Greenland Photograph courtesy of Greenland Tourism. VIII: Acknowledgements I wish to express my gratitude to all those whose patient expertise aided me in the preparation of this document. Some of the material included in Defining the Inuit Dog is from personal conversations with and the writings (including important contributions to The Fan Hitch journal) of: Vladimir Beregovoy, PhD. Vladimir Beregovoy graduated
from Perm State University as a biologist in 1960. He
defended his dissertation in 1964 and was awarded a Degree
of Candidate of Sciences from the Institute of Biology,
Uralian Branch of Academy of Sciences of the USSR, where
he worked as a zoologist. He taught at the Kuban State
University, Krasnodar. During his work as a zoologist, he
traveled to Ural, West Siberia, Volga River region,
Kazakhstan and North Caucasus. Beregovoy has published
several articles in popular magazines and two books: Primitive Breeds-Perfect
Dogs and Hunting Laika Breeds of
Russia. He is also the advisor and curator
of the Primitive and Aboriginal Dog Society, International
(PADS) as well as a member of the editorial board of the
PADS Journal.
Johan and Edith Gallant During travels through
southern Africa in their quest for the essence of the dog,
they discovered the native African dogs. They realized
that all those years as ill-informed bystanders,
exhibiting at shows, participating in obedience and
working trials and eventually judging they had looked at
these native dogs with contempt. The western worship for
the 'pure' breeds of dogs had veiled their vision of
native African dogs. They soon were faced with the fact
that these rural dogs represented an ancient landrace,
certainly not 'improved' or streamlined into fashionable
homogeneity. But their behavior is so intense and uniform,
their physical prowess and health condition so remarkable
that they inspired the Gallants to begin in-depth
research. They named this African dog AfriCanis. Johan is
co-founder and current chairman of the AfriCanis Society.
The Gallants current perspective and respect for canine
landraces emerged from their apprehension that Canis familiaris, the
domestic dog as a whole has been badly misunderstood.
Their book, SOS Dog: The Purebred Dog
Hobby Re-examined was written to be the
dog's mouthpiece.
Benson Ginsberg, PhD. Benson Ginsburg, professor
emeritus of Psychology (University of Connecticut), was
among the first to study behavior genetics, a scientific
discipline of which he is one of the founding fathers and
preeminent leaders. He also established and, for sixteen
years prior to his retirement, headed the Biobehavioral
Sciences Department at the UCONN Storrs campus. His
department reflected an approach to research ranging from
the biology of the brain and behavior to anthropology,
neurobiology, and psychology.
Dr. Ginsburg's research has been devoted to relating behavior to genes as the essence of behavior genetics, and involved studies of the evolution of social behavior using animal models which included dogs and their wild relatives: wolves and coyotes. Dr. Ginsburg's early studies of canid socialization and wolf social and reproductive behavior were focused, in part, on the degree to which there was flexibility in social development and specifically whether there was a critical period during development after which wolf pups could not be socialized to humans. Dr. Ginsburg is the author and co-author of scores books and scientific publications, many of them about canid genetics and behavior. Ken MacRury Ken MacRury moved to the
Canadian Arctic in 1971. During the two years he lived in
Igluliq (1974-1976), he was introduced to "real dog teams
and real drivers", traveling and hunting by Inuit Dog team
in a traditional manner under the mentoring of a respected
Inuk dog man. During that time, Ken introduced Bill
Carpenter to people who were able to provide foundation
dogs for Carpenter and McGrath’s Eskimo Dog Recovery
Project in Yellowknife, NWT. Ken collaborated with the
program by exchanging breeding stock. In 1991 he completed
his thesis, The Inuit Dog: Its
Provenance, Environment and History, in
fulfillment of his Master of Philosophy in Polar Studies
at Darwin College, Scott Polar Research Institute,
University of Cambridge, England. This document remains
today the most comprehensive scientific study of the
primitive aboriginal dog of the circumpolar North and it
is still much sought after as a valuable resource for
northern dog enthusiasts, scientists, authors and
filmmakers worldwide as well as aboriginal and
non-aboriginal government agencies and Inuit cultural
organizations. Ken has granted exclusive publication and
distribution rights to his thesis to Mark and Sue
Hamilton, owners of The
Fan Hitch website and journal of the Inuit
Sled Dog. His generosity has not only served to support
the journal's web hosting services, but also has enabled The Fan Hitch to
donate journal print subscriptions, copies of the thesis
and money to enhance a better understanding of Inuit Dogs
and veterinary wellness clinics in the North.
From his time in Igluliq and through the balance of his northern stay in Iqaluit on Baffin Island until his retirement and relocation to Atlantic Canada in 2002, Ken kept, bred, traveled and hunted with Inuit Dogs. Also I would like to thank all the wonderful folks who, since the birth of The Fan Hitch journal, have unselfishly granted permission to use their photographs. Thank you to my husband Mark for his collaboration, suggestions and saint-like patience in formatting and mounting text and images to the web and making all those seemingly endless links, re-writes, edits and corrections; and thanks again to Ken MacRury for his critical review of this entire document and helping to polish it; and to Lucille Murphy of MaineMade Dog Sleds for taking time away from creating sled bags and handlebar mitts to "comb over" every word, space, punctuation mark and sentence in order to identify all the glitches I missed! Special thanks to Jayko and Philippa Ootoowak for their kindness, patience and generosity; to Puggiq, Amaruq and Tiriganiaq who literally led us down new life trails; and to Tewa and Miranda, two North American grey wolves, who spent their retirement years in our kennel teaching us so much about the naturally wild side of canids. |