Native Americans of North America
The 1996 census reported there were 1,170,190 people with aboriginal ancestry in Canada, making up about 3 percent of Canada’s inhabitants. Some 867,225 reported North American Indian ancestry; 220,740 reported Métis; and 49,845 Inuit. Counts based on identity went down from the overall number: 554,000 identified as North American Indian, 210,000 as Métis, and 41,000 as Inuit. About 6,400 people were counted more than once because they claimed to be members of more than one aboriginal group. But Statistics Canada admitted its census did not catch everyone; forms were not completed on more than 75 Indian reserves.
Recent estimates of Latin America’s total indigenous population vary from 40 million to 49 million people. Native groups are spread unevenly throughout the area. The majority of indigenous people live along the mountainous spine of Middle and South America, in densely settled villages in the Mesoamerican highlands and the Andes Mountains.
The size of indigenous populations varies widely from country to country in Latin America. In some countries, indigenous people make up almost half or more of the population. These countries include Bolivia (60 percent of the population), Peru (45 percent), Guatemala (44 to 53 percent), Ecuador (43 percent), and Mexico (8 to 30 percent). Bolivia is the only country that officially describes itself as having a Native American majority.
The countries with large indigenous populations—notably Mexico, Ecuador, and Peru—also have very large numbers of people, even majorities, who are mestizo. The term mestizo refers to people of mixed indigenous and European or African ancestry who generally do not practice indigenous lifeways. Mestizos make up between 70 and 92 percent of Mexico’s population, 40 percent of Ecuador’s population, and 37 percent of Peru’s population.
The last Census report I saw estimated the population of Americans who are Indian or part-Indian has risen from 4.1 to 4.5 million.
Below: Some of the 95% of Indians who don't live in the US or Canada.
2 comments:
Writerfella here --
Who wrote this mess? The population archaeologists at Princeton who issued their estimates in 1999 reckoned that North America hosted 110 million Natives, with South America hosting 55 millions. How difficult is it to research scientific studies, especially in these days of the internet? Someone doesn't know how it is done, or resists the simple amount of keystrokes necessary to find the facts...
All Best
Russ Bates
'writerfella'
How difficult is it to read plain English? In your case, very.
Did you see the word "Today's" in the title? Or the mentions of Canada's 1996 census and the US's 2000 census? In this posting I'm talking about the estimated Native population in 2008, not in 1491.
To reiterate the words in front of your face: "According to the 2000 census, about 2.5 million people in the United States reported they were Native Americans." If you think Princeton estimated the 1999 Native population of North America as 110 million when the US census said it was 2.5 million a year later, you're even dumber than I thought. Learn to freakin' read, nitwit.
Since you never provide an ounce of evidence to support your claims, your calumny must refer to yourself. As far as I can tell, you don't know how to research and you resist the simple keystrokes necessary to find the facts. Add your demonstrated inability to read and you're the only mess around here.
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