John Steckley
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John Steckley is a scholar specializing in Native American Studies and the indigenous languages of the Americas. He currently teaches at Humber College in Toronto, Ontario.
Steckley is reportedly the last known speaker of the Wyandot (or Huron) Language[1].
[edit] Bibliography
- Huron Clans and Phratries
- The Cord Tribe of the Huron
- The Huron Calendar
- Who were the Kontrande,enronnon?
- A Neutral Point
- An Ethnolinguistic Analysis of Tobacco Among the Huron
- What Made the Wenro Turn Turtle?
- A Tale of Two Peoples
- Were Burbot Important to the Huron?
- Raccoons and Black Squirrels
- Ataronchronon: the Linguistic Evidence
- Whose Child Is This?
- Teyoyagon: Split in Two
- Toanche: Not Where Champlain Landed
- Linguistic Identification of French-influenced Huron village construction
- Huron Bead Ethnolinguistics
- Huron Armour
- An Ethnolinguistic Look at the Huron Longhouse
- Enditenliwaen
- Huron Sweat Lodges: The Linguistic Evidence
- Men: Carriers of Contagion?
- Owhista
- The Huron Mat of War
- The Early Map 'Novvelle France'
- Developing a Theory of Smallpox
- Omens, Models, Captains and Kings
- Names for the Odawa
- Reciprocal Burial: The Aiheonde Relationship
- One Bear or Two?
- One Bear or Two Too
- The Mysterious -M-
- The First Huron-French Dictionary?
- Rock and Southern Bear: Another Feature Shared
- From Your Place to Mine: Huron Marriage Gifts
- Southern Bear's -chr-: How can a sound be like a bat's wing?
- Pieces of -8-: Another Southern Bear Feature
- White Lies About the Inuit
[edit] Notes
- ^ J. Goddard, Scholar sole speaker of Huron language, Toronto Star, Dec 24, 2007.

