WOLFPACKS

 

 

"Wolfpacks" refers to a group of people different than the Algonquins who surrounded them. Hyde described the people, who ate their way across Ohio, as behaving similar to wolfpacks. The wolfpacks may also have eaten the people of Michigamme. Strong circumstantial evidence supports that hypothesis. Locations in Michigan reveal buried trauma. Modern history books state that Michigan was under populated when the Europeans arrived.

The fear of aggression by the wolfpacks was the main concern of the Algonquins, so "Wolfpacks" is used in this web site rather than the modern names of the people. For those interested enough to research further, the modern names of the wolfpack people should be immediately recognizable by their location south of Lake Ontario. Adams, 1951, Coulter, 1993, Hyde, 1962, and Morison, 1972 all testify to the reality of the fear of aggression from the wolfpacks into historic times.

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