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Experience the Blackfoot culture at this stunning facility near Calgary. Enjoy exhibits, tours, education, food, gift shop, conference centre and more.
- ABOUT
Blackfoot Crossing Historical Park is a world renowned...
- OUR CULTURE
OUR CULTURE - Blackfoot Crossing – Blackfoot Crossing...
- EXHIBITS
EXHIBITS - Blackfoot Crossing – Blackfoot Crossing...
- WHAT WE OFFER
Blackfoot Crossing Historical Park offers conference centre...
- NEWS
Attention: Blackfoot Crossing will be closed to the public...
- CONTACT
Blackfoot Crossing Historical Park Address: P.O. Box 1639,...
- ABOUT
Il s'agit d'un gué ( crossing en anglais) de la rivière Bow qui était traditionnellement utilisé pour la chasse au bison et comme lieu de rassemblement par les Siksikas et leurs alliés de la Confédération des Pieds-Noirs ( Blackfoot en anglais).
- 2007
- blackfootcrossing.ca
- Lieu historique national ( 1992)
- Paysage culturel, site historique
Blackfoot Crossing Historical Park is a complex of historic sites on the Siksika 146 Indian reserve in Alberta, Canada. This crossing of the Bow River was traditionally a bison -hunting and gathering place for the Siksika people and their allies in the Blackfoot Confederacy .
Learn about the rich history and culture of the Blackfoot people at this park near Calgary. See exhibits, monuments, tipi village, theatre and more at the historical signing site of Treaty No. 7.
Learn about the history and culture of the Siksika (Blackfoot) Nation at this Canadian National Heritage Site. Explore the building design, exhibits, and events that reflect the sacred icons, traditions, and stories of the Blackfoot people.
Marchez sur les traces des 10 000 guerriers de la Confédération des Pieds-Noirs là où le Traité No.7 a été signé. Le parc historique de Blackfoot Crossing propose des expositions interactives mettant en valeur la culture, l’histoire et les traditions des peuples des Pieds-Noirs et de la Nation Siksika. Des représentations ...
Blackfoot Crossing is a national historic site of Canada where five First Nations met with the Crown in 1877 to sign Treaty No. 7. The site has archaeological and cultural significance for the Siksika Nation and other Aboriginal peoples who used the ford and the floodplain for generations.