Canuck Bob,
Thanks for your comments!
The photograph of the Cree hunter is from a Canadian website,
Our Legacy. There is more detail about the photo here:
Cree Hunter with Gun. I think the original image is held in the Saskatchewan Archives Board Photo Collection. I agree, it is a wonderful image.
I mentioned two books. One was
On Snow-Shoes to the Barren Grounds, by Caspar Whitney (1865-1929). The author was a keen sportsman who traveled the world. This book documents his trip to the Canadian Arctic in pursuit of musk oxen and wood bison in 1894 and 1895, in the company of a group of Dogrib hunters. It is a fascinating read. Whitney himself carried a breechloader, but muzzle-loaders were in common use among the native people. This is an illustration from the book:
You can find old copies or reprints of
On Snow-Shoes to the Barren Grounds from Abe Books or Amazon Marketplace, or you can read it online for free, courtesy of Hathitrust:
On Snow-Shoes to the Barren Grounds. Look for the heading "Item Link," and click any of the ones that say "Full View." The first one, from Yale University, has very clear text.
Uncle Dick Wootton was a real American mountain man, mentioned by name in Ruxton's
Life in the Far West. At a very advanced age, he dictated his memoirs to Howard L. Conard, who published them as a book,
"Uncle Dick" Wootton, in 1890. This book was republished as a very high quality exact facsimile by Time-Life Books in 1980. I acquired a copy of this many years ago, and still have it. You might find a copy from one of the sellers mentioned above. This book is a classic of the old west, and Wootton had much to say in it about the firearms that interest all of us.
Best regards,
Notchy Bob