google_ad_channel =""; Halifax: Nova Scotia Museum, 1989. Halifax: Nimbus Publishing and Nova Scotia Museum, 1992. 7. Micmac, Maliceet and Beothuk Collections in Great Britain. YOUR COUNTRY. Beating time on a noisemaker, a drum, or even a hollowed-out log, would signal to the community that storytelling was about to begin. Indian tribes The illustrator is also Indigenous. This process occurred in seven stages or levels of creation and is described as follows: First Level of Creation: The Giver of Life. For more like this subscribe to the Open University channel https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXsH4hSV_kEdAOsupMMm4QwFree learning from … October 15, 2010, 7:08 am. Welcome! As part of the social studies curriculum students should develop an understanding of the traditional ways of life and beliefs of the Mi'kmaq. The sky represents the Giver of Life, Gisoolg, who creates everything. The caribou were always available for the use of the Mi’kmaq, who knew their migratory paths and followed the caribou through the seasons. Indian art,