Friday, May 15, 2026

Atlantic and Pacific Subtropical Highs in Mid-May 2026: A Tale of Two Blocking Anticyclones

 

Executive Summary

As of mid-May 2026, the atmospheric circulation of the Northern Hemisphere is dominated by two large, persistent subtropical anticyclones whose behavior is producing strikingly different — and in some ways opposite — regional outcomes. Off the west coast of North America, the North Pacific High (NPH) has anchored an unusually strong, persistent ridge over the eastern Pacific and the western U.S., extending a winter-long blocking pattern into spring. It is deflecting Pacific moisture far north into Alaska and the Gulf of Alaska or shunting it south toward Mexico and the subtropical jet, locking the western United States and western Canada into anomalous heat and worsening drought. Across the Atlantic, the Azores / North Atlantic Subtropical High is in the early stages of its seasonal poleward and westward migration toward its summer (Bermuda High) position; this past winter, however, it sat farther east and weaker than usual, allowing an exceptional run of Atlantic storms to break a seven-year drought in Morocco. Now, with the seasonal Sahara Heat Low strengthening, the subtropical Atlantic High is reasserting subsidence over the northwestern Sahara and limiting moisture incursions, even as the West African monsoon prepares to ramp up to the south. Both systems are operating during an ENSO transition from a just-ended 2025–26 La Niña to a developing El Niño, and both show signatures consistent with multi-decadal trends — Hadley-cell expansion, poleward migration of subtropical highs, and an apparent restructuring of the North American winter waveguide — that peer-reviewed work links explicitly to anthropogenic climate change.


1. The North Pacific High and Western North America

Current Position and Strength

The North Pacific High in mid-May 2026 is behaving as an unusually strong, persistent, and northward-displaced anticyclone for this time of year. NOAA Ocean Prediction Center high-seas analyses from May 12, 2026 depict a sprawling ridge axis over the central and eastern subtropical North Pacific that, together with anomalous heights over the U.S. West Coast, is forcing the Pacific storm track sharply northward — the OPC's text products place the active storm/gale-warning lows around 53–58°N near the Aleutians (e.g., a 989-mb complex low at 53°N 174°W on May 12) while the area south of about 42°N remains dominated by light winds and the subtropical ridge. Climatologically the NPH at this time of year is just beginning its summer expansion toward 30°–40°N / 140°–150°W; this year, however, mid-troposphere height anomalies have remained large and positive over the eastern Pacific and the interior West more or less continuously since the autumn of 2025.

NOAA confirmed that winter 2025–26 was the warmest on record across the majority of the American West, with seven states setting all-time winter records, several by more than 2 °F. The proximate cause was a near-stationary ridge over (or just inland of) the West Coast — what observers have termed a "Ridiculously Resilient Ridge"-style pattern — that, far from breaking down with the seasonal transition, intensified spectacularly in March 2026 into a record-shattering heat dome over the Southwest. ECMWF, CFSv2, Copernicus, and CanSIPS ensembles entering May continue to depict a "massive upper-level ridge" over the eastern Pacific and U.S. West Coast, with the 250-hPa jet stream split forced around the ridge core: one branch shunted into Alaska, the other displaced south toward Mexico and the southern Plains.

How the NPH Is Blocking and Redirecting Pacific Moisture

The physical geometry is classic anticyclonic blocking. Clockwise circulation around the high accelerates the polar jet poleward on its northern flank, sending Pacific storm systems and their associated atmospheric rivers into the Gulf of Alaska, British Columbia, and Alaska rather than allowing them to make landfall along the Pacific Northwest, California, or the Great Basin. On the southern flank of the ridge, the easterly trade-wind component and the displaced subtropical jet have funneled tropical Pacific moisture eastward across northern Mexico into the southern Plains and Deep South, producing the wet, severe-weather-prone "Ring of Fire" pattern downstream while leaving the West parched. Subsidence under the ridge dries and warms the descending column adiabatically, suppressing convection and clearing skies across the interior West.

A notable wrinkle this spring has been the role of diabatic ridge-building: heavy precipitation events near Hawaii (a deep Kona Low in March produced record-breaking Hawaiian rainfall) released enormous quantities of latent heat that was advected downstream into the Pacific Northwest along atmospheric-river corridors, amplifying the downstream ridge over the West to levels analyst Daniel Swain and others characterized as the most extreme cool-season ridge ever observed over North America. The World Weather Attribution group concluded that the March 2026 western heat wave "would have been virtually impossible without human-induced climate change."

Real-time visualization platforms such as earth.nullschool.net (which renders global GFS-derived MSLP, 500-hPa heights, and wind fields) consistently show this pattern as a broad anticyclonic gyre centered in the eastern subtropical Pacific with a strong, northward-extended ridge axis impinging on the U.S. West Coast — qualitatively matching the NOAA OPC analyses and ensemble depictions cited above, although nullschool's particle-flow visualizations do not provide formal central-pressure values for the high.

Precipitation and Drought Consequences

The blocking has translated directly into severe and worsening hydroclimate stress:

  • U.S. Drought Monitor (May 13, 2026 release): 51.35% of the U.S. and Puerto Rico, and 61.47% of the lower 48 states, are in drought (D1 or worse) — approaching the 2012 record. Drought worsened in large parts of the Northwest, Plains, Midwest, and Mid-Atlantic in the week ending May 13.
  • Western intensification: Exceptional drought (D4) was expanded in southern Idaho; extreme drought (D3) was introduced in Oregon and expanded in Montana, Idaho, and Nevada. Coastal and Great Basin stations recorded less than one-tenth of an inch of rain in the monitoring week. Localized improvement was seen in southern Arizona, western Nevada, and parts of Wyoming/Colorado where a May snowstorm and showers occurred.
  • Snowpack collapse: The March 2026 heat dome triggered a historically unprecedented snow-water-equivalent decline across the Upper Colorado Basin, plunging values far below previous record lows for late March. Across the West, snow cover on December 7, 2025 had been the lowest in the MODIS satellite record for that date.
  • Wildfire activity: Roughly 1.8 million acres had burned nationally by late April — nearly double the 10-year average — including the historic Moral Fire (Nebraska) and Ranger Road Fire (Oklahoma/Kansas). The Climate Prediction Center's flash-drought outlook signals continued rapid drying risk in the West.
  • Canada: The same blocking ridge is forecast (per CanSIPS and Copernicus) to deliver anomalous May heat and dryness across British Columbia and Alberta as Pacific storms continue to be deflected northward into a Gulf-of-Alaska/Aleutian storm corridor.
  • Agriculture: The USDA forecasts the lowest U.S. wheat acreage since 1919 amid widespread drought; 88% of Nebraska, ~60% of Colorado and Utah, and nearly 82% of Florida are in extreme or exceptional drought (the last largely a separate Southeast story, but symptomatic of the broader pattern).

Notably, the eastern half of the country has experienced the inverse — cooler than normal temperatures and frequent moisture — including beneficial precipitation that reduced drought in parts of the Southern Plains and Southeast in early May. This dipole, warm/dry West and cool/wet East, has been the signature pattern of the past two winters and the spring of 2026.

Connection to Broader Climate Patterns

ENSO state: NOAA's CPC declared the end of the 2025–26 La Niña in April 2026 (the "Final La Niña Advisory") and issued an "El Niño Watch." The May 2026 ENSO probability update shows ENSO-neutral conditions transitioning rapidly toward El Niño, with El Niño favored for May–July 2026 (NOAA ≈ 61–62%; the IRI April plume placed the chance at 70% for AMJ and 88–94% thereafter through DJF 2026/27). NOAA gives El Niño a 96% chance of persisting through DJF 2026–27. The WMO has flagged "high confidence" in El Niño onset by mid-2026, with the spring predictability barrier the principal remaining uncertainty. The late stages of a La Niña — and the residual cold-pool/atmospheric inertia that lingers after one — are classically associated with a strengthened, northward-displaced NPH that suppresses storminess along the U.S. West Coast while keeping the polar jet active to its north, which is consistent with what has been observed. (USDA meteorologist Brad Rippey notes that the developing strong El Niño may provide some relief later, particularly to the southern tier in winter 2026–27, but this is far from certain and there is a huge water deficit to make up.)

Jet stream and blocking: The split-jet configuration with a near-vanishing 250-hPa flow over the ridge core represents textbook high-amplitude blocking, occasionally forming Omega-block geometries. Peer-reviewed work on a projected increase of summer "heat-dome-like" stationary waves over northwestern North America (npj Climate and Atmospheric Science, 2023), together with analyses by Deirdre Des Jardins and Daniel Swain, argue that the leading mode of North American winter circulation has shifted toward a recurrent warm-West/cool-East dipole (sometimes called the North American Winter Dipole or NAWD), linked to greenhouse-gas-forced changes in the jet stream and the atmospheric waveguide. There is also published evidence (Bartusek et al. 2022; others) that low Barents Sea ice can preferentially favor ridge-building over western North America via Rossby wave responses.

Climate-change linkage: Multiple lines of evidence connect the NPH's recent behavior to anthropogenic forcing. Hadley-cell expansion has been observed at roughly 0.1°–0.5° latitude per decade over the past ~40 years, with consequent poleward migration and intensification of subtropical highs (Grise and Davis 2020; Schmidt and Grise 2019). CMIP6-based projections show 21st-century poleward shifts of subtropical highs of order 1.5°, with the subtropical jet strengthening in winter. Modeling by Schmidt et al. suggests North American summertime precipitation is more sensitive to shifts in the subtropical highs than to changes in the zonal-mean Hadley cell — even modest poleward and onshore expansion of the NPH can have outsized drying effects on the western U.S. While the central pressure of the NPH itself may weaken slightly in some warming projections (the CESM Large Ensemble shows reduced central-Pacific subsidence and a northward shift of the descent maximum), the impact on landfalling moisture remains drying for the U.S. West Coast.


2. The Azores / North Atlantic Subtropical High and Northwest Africa

Current Position and Behavior

The Azores High (also called the North Atlantic Subtropical High; in its summer western-displaced form, the Bermuda High) in mid-May 2026 is in the early phase of its seasonal poleward and westward migration. Climatologically, the system's center moves toward roughly 35°N over the eastern Atlantic and Iberian Peninsula during late spring, then toward Bermuda (with central pressure typically around 1024 hPa) by midsummer.

The system's behavior over the past eight months has been unusual in two phases:

  1. Winter 2025–26 — anomalously displaced/weakened over the eastern Atlantic. The High sat farther east, or was less expansive, than typical for recent decades, which allowed an exceptionally active Atlantic storm track to penetrate south into Morocco and Algeria. Successive frontal systems and atmospheric rivers brought rainfall and high-elevation snow that, by January 12, 2026, prompted Morocco's water minister to formally declare an end to a seven-year drought — the worst in 40 years. National dam fill rates rose from 28% (January 2025) to 46% (January 2026); winter rainfall was 95% higher year-on-year and 17% above the seasonal average; snowpack briefly covered 55,495 km² of mountainous terrain. By February 20, 2026, Copernicus satellite imagery showed water resources up roughly 155% versus the prior year in northeastern Morocco, with several reservoirs overflowing. Heavy rains, however, also triggered destructive floods and landslides — a familiar "whiplash" pattern.
  2. Spring 2026 transition — High reasserting subsidence. By April–May 2026, the Azores High has begun reasserting its more conventional configuration, with subsidence redeveloping over the northwestern Sahara and the eastern subtropical Atlantic and the Sahara Heat Low (SHL) intensifying inland. NOAA CPC's Africa Hazards Outlook in May 2026 flags "much above-average temperatures" likely to produce "abnormally hot conditions in southern Mauritania" and adjacent regions — consistent with strengthening subsidence on the southern flank of the subtropical ridge. Real-time visualizations on earth.nullschool.net show the characteristic anticyclonic gyre re-establishing itself between roughly 25–40°N over the eastern Atlantic, with northeasterly trade winds reasserting along the African coast.

How the High Affects Moisture Flow Around Northwest Africa

The Azores High shapes northwestern African moisture in three principal ways:

  • Direct subsidence and aridity. The system is the surface expression of the descending branch of the Northern Hemisphere Hadley cell. Its sinking air aloft produces dry adiabatic warming and stable stratification that maintain the Sahara's hyper-aridity and the Mediterranean Basin's summer drought. When the ridge is strong and expansive, this subsidence reaches farther into Morocco, Algeria, and the Iberian Peninsula.
  • Steering of Atlantic frontal systems. The High's location dictates whether mid-latitude cyclones traversing the North Atlantic dip south into Morocco (when the ridge is contracted or displaced east, as occurred in 2025–26) or are deflected north of Iberia toward the British Isles and Scandinavia (when the ridge expands poleward, as it tends to do in summer and increasingly does year-round under anthropogenic forcing — see below). Britannica notes that periodic offshore high-pressure ridges shifting storms northward are a primary cause of Moroccan drought episodes. The cold Canary Current along Morocco's western coast adds another layer of low-level stability that further suppresses precipitation.
  • Steering of African Easterly Waves and Saharan dust. On the southern flank of the high, anticyclonic clockwise circulation generates the northeasterly trades and the Harmattan, which carry African Easterly Waves and Saharan dust westward across the tropical Atlantic toward the Caribbean. The latitude of the Azores High is more strongly correlated with winter Saharan dust transport than the NAO index itself (Riemer et al. 2006 and follow-ups).

Implications for the Sahara Margin and the Sahel

Even as the Azores High shuts down Atlantic moisture incursions to its south, the seasonal northward migration of the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) is starting to deliver the West African Monsoon (WAM) to the southern Sahel. The 2026 PRESASS / AGRHYMET regional seasonal outlook, presented in N'Djamena ahead of the rainy season, warns of uneven rainfall: some areas likely to see above-average rains and elevated flood risk, others delayed or below-average rains with heightened drought and food-security concerns. Government and humanitarian agencies have been urged to undertake early water-management and disaster-risk preparation.

This bifurcated outlook is consistent with the Sahel's well-documented increasing rainfall variability. Yang et al. (Nature Communications, 2026) find that greenhouse warming is projected to increase Sahel interannual rainfall variability, raising the frequency of both extreme wet and extreme dry seasons, particularly in the central-eastern Sahel, with stronger ENSO variability part of the driver. About 70–90% of West African annual precipitation is delivered by Mesoscale Convective Systems (MCSs) embedded in the WAM; the position and strength of the SHL and the African Easterly Jet (AEJ) determine where these MCSs concentrate, and both are sensitive to the subtropical Atlantic high above them.

Northwestern Africa proper (Morocco, western Algeria, Mauritania) is sandwiched between two regimes the subtropical Atlantic High mediates: a Mediterranean cool-season rainfall regime to the north (which delivered this past winter's drought-busting rains) and the WAM zone to the south, with the Sahara core in between dominated by year-round subsidence. With the Azores High now expanding back toward its summer configuration, Morocco is entering its long dry season; the question for coming months is whether the High will lock into the expanded position typical of recent decades, in which case the wet winter will represent only a temporary respite from structural drying.

Connection to Broader Climate Patterns

Climate change and Azores High expansion. The landmark paper by Cresswell-Clay et al. (Nature Geoscience, 2022) — using observations, ensemble climate-model simulations, and proxy records from Portuguese stalagmites — found that winters with an extremely large Azores High have become significantly more common in the industrial era (post-1850) than at any time in the past 1,200 years. Specifically, the frequency of extreme-large-Azores-High winters has increased from roughly one every 10 years in the pre-industrial period to one every four years in the 21st century, with an extreme event reducing rainfall on the western coast of the Iberian Peninsula by about 35.3 mm per month. The authors attribute the expansion to anthropogenic greenhouse-gas forcing.

A caveat noted in commentary on this paper: Jacob Scheff (UNC Charlotte) has pointed out that the paper's "unprecedented in 1,200 years" claim strictly applies to the CESM Last Millennium Ensemble in most simulations; high-resolution real-world verification across a full millennium is not directly possible. Nonetheless, the observational expansion since 1850 is robust, and complementary work indicates a northward migration of the Atlantic-high center of roughly 0.25° latitude per decade (p < 0.02), consistent with the projected poleward expansion of the Hadley cell.

Broader Hadley-cell context. The Atlantic case is one regional expression of the global poleward shift of subtropical highs linked to Hadley-cell widening. CMIP6 projections for the MENA region show subtropical highs migrating poleward by ~1.5° by the end of the century under SSP5-8.5, with the subtropical jet strengthening by about 10% in winter and storm tracks shifting poleward. Modeling indicates a further westward expansion of the high toward the southeastern U.S. and a 35% intensification of coastal upwelling along northern Iberia by 2070–2099 under SSP5-8.5 — both of which would amplify drying over southern Europe, the western Mediterranean, and the northern Maghreb. Spanish researchers have characterized this trend as a "subtropicalization" of the Iberian climate, with a weakening of the zonal jet and an increase in both extreme dry and extreme wet (convective) events.

ENSO. Unlike the Pacific case, the Azores High's seasonal behavior is less directly entrained by ENSO; the North Atlantic Oscillation (the high's pairing with the Icelandic Low) is the dominant mode of variability. However, ENSO transitions like the current La Niña→El Niño shift can modulate tropical-Atlantic SSTs and indirectly influence the high's strength and position, particularly during late summer and autumn, and ENSO is one driver of Yang et al.'s projected Sahel variability increase.

The 2025–26 anomaly in context. The very wet 2025–26 Moroccan winter therefore appears to have been a notable interannual departure from the recent expanding-Azores-High trend — a reminder that internal NAO variability still produces large excursions from the long-term forced trend. Whether this represents a one-off respite or the beginning of a less-expanded regime cannot yet be determined; published projections continue to indicate a long-term drying trajectory for the western Mediterranean and adjacent North Africa even as interannual variability rises.


3. Synthesis: Two Hemispheres, One Mechanism

The two systems described here — the North Pacific High redirecting Pacific moisture away from western North America, and the Azores/North Atlantic Subtropical High strengthening over the eastern Atlantic to suppress moisture flow into northwestern Africa — are not unrelated. Both are manifestations of the Northern Hemisphere subtropical ridge, the surface expression of the descending branch of the Hadley circulation. Both have been shown, by independent lines of evidence, to be expanding poleward, intensifying, and producing more frequent extreme blocking episodes in the industrial era, with peer-reviewed attribution to anthropogenic forcing in both cases.

The mid-May 2026 snapshot captures this in real time:

  • The NPH is anchoring a winter-into-spring blocking pattern that has already produced one of the most anomalous heat events ever observed in the cool-season American West (March 2026) and has driven U.S. drought coverage to near-2012 record levels just as El Niño begins to develop. Pacific moisture is being routed into a Gulf-of-Alaska/Aleutian storm corridor to the north and into a subtropical jet across northern Mexico to the south, with the western interior bone-dry beneath persistent subsidence.
  • The Azores High, after an anomalously displaced winter that broke Morocco's seven-year drought, is reasserting its climatological grip on northwestern Africa as the West African Monsoon begins to engage to the south — with regional climate centers warning of both flood and drought risks across the Sahel and the structural drying trend across the western Mediterranean remaining intact.

A developing El Niño, superimposed on the warmest-on-record western U.S. winter and a still-recovering Moroccan water system, sets the stage for a 2026 in which atmospheric blocking continues to be a dominant story.

4. Uncertainties and Caveats

  • Real-time central-pressure values for the NPH and Azores High on May 14–15, 2026 were not located as discrete numerical readings in publicly indexed sources beyond NOAA OPC text products. Qualitative characterizations (strong, persistent, northward-displaced NPH ridge; Azores High beginning seasonal expansion) are firmly supported by NOAA OPC analyses, NOAA CPC Africa Hazards Outlook, ensemble depictions, and analyst commentary. earth.nullschool.net visualizations qualitatively confirm both patterns (an expansive subtropical-Pacific anticyclone with a northward ridge axis to the West Coast; a re-strengthening eastern-Atlantic ridge) but do not produce a citable instantaneous central-pressure figure.
  • Long-lead ENSO forecasts cross the spring predictability barrier; even the strong model consensus on El Niño development through 2026 carries genuine uncertainty, and forecast outcomes range from continued ENSO-neutral to a possible very strong El Niño (NOAA puts the chance of Niño-3.4 ≥ +2.0 °C in winter at roughly 1 in 4).
  • Climate-change attribution for individual events (e.g., the March 2026 heat dome) is well-established by World Weather Attribution and Climate Central. Attribution of the pattern — the recurring NAWD-style warm-West/cool-East dipole and the expanded Azores High — rests on convergent but still-active research programs, with some critiques (e.g., Scheff's on Cresswell-Clay et al.) noting limits on what individual model studies can prove about pre-instrumental real-world variability.
  • The Azores High's wet-winter 2025–26 anomaly over Morocco illustrates that the long-term trend toward greater subtropical high expansion does not preclude large interannual departures. One wet winter has not resolved Morocco's structural water-resource problem; the government continues a major investment in desalination (targeted at ~60% of national drinking water by 2030).
  • Source quality. Some pattern interpretations draw on respected analyst blogs (Weather West, California Water Research) and forecast-summary sites (Pogodnik, drought.gov, weatherbug) that are distinct from peer-reviewed literature; they have been used here for synoptic context, with primary peer-reviewed studies (Cresswell-Clay et al. 2022, Yang et al. 2026, Schmidt and Grise 2019, Hadley-cell expansion literature, and the September 2023 npj Climate and Atmospheric Science work on heat-dome-like stationary waves) used for the structural climate-change claims. Some forward-looking statements in forecast outlooks use conditional language ("may," "could," "is expected to") and are treated here as outlooks rather than established facts.

Overall, mid-May 2026 represents an unusually clear illustration of how the Northern Hemisphere's two great subtropical anticyclones — long-known features of the climate system — are increasingly behaving in ways that amplify regional drying on their eastern and equatorward flanks, while occasionally allowing extreme storm windows (such as Morocco's drought-busting winter or eastern-U.S. severe weather) to slip through. The atmospheric blocking the user's query describes is real, it is current, and it is increasingly understood as a manifestation of a circulation regime now being reshaped by human-caused climate change.

Thursday, May 14, 2026

North–South Trade and Human Movement Between the Missouri and Saskatchewan River Watersheds Before the Settler Era

 

Drawing of "typical" activities in the life of a Plains Indian band.

Overview

Long before railways or agricultural settlement transformed the northern Great Plains, the watersheds of the Missouri and Saskatchewan rivers were linked by one of the most dynamic and consequential Indigenous trade systems in North America. Goods, people, languages, technologies, and biological realities — horses, disease, seeds — all moved through a corridor stretching roughly 800 kilometres north to south, across what are today the Canadian prairies and the American northern plains. The archaeological record pushes this connectivity back at least 13,000 years, while ethnohistorical and documentary evidence illuminates its richest era between roughly 1650 and 1870, before railways and the settler rush severed the old routes and confined peoples to reserves and reservations.


I. The Physiographic Corridor

The two great watersheds are not isolated: they share a broad geographical ramp across the Missouri Coteau, a narrow band of hummocky glacial upland that stretches from southern Saskatchewan into South Dakota. The Coteau's eastern escarpment and the Souris (Mouse) River basin provided a natural north–south route flanking the Missouri's upper reaches, while the Assiniboine and Qu'Appelle river systems offered branching connections westward into the Saskatchewan basin. Along the western edge of the corridor, the Old North Trail — a corridor worn deeply into the foothills east of the Rocky Mountains — extended from the Arctic to Mexico, and forked near what is now Calgary. Together these physiographic features meant that north–south movement across both watersheds required no ocean or mountain crossing; the terrain actively invited it.[1][2][3][4]


II. Deep Prehistory: Stone, Shell, and the Earliest Networks (13,000 BCE – 500 CE)

The archaeological evidence for very long-distance exchange is unambiguous. Researchers have analysed more than 1,200 obsidian artifacts from nearly 100 Alberta sites dating from 13,000 to 300 years ago. Obsidian does not occur naturally in Alberta — every fragment was imported — with the majority sourced to Bear Gulch, Idaho, and Obsidian Cliff, Wyoming, both within or near the upper Missouri watershed. The scale of this movement is remarkable: archaeologist Timothy Allan concluded that "likely millions of people were in contact with one another," and that the scope of the network was "way more massive than we thought".[5][6]

Knife River Flint (KRF), quarried in Dunn and Mercer Counties of North Dakota near a Missouri tributary, provides another north–south tracer. The KRF quarry complex covers about 200 hectares with 29 pit complexes; the flint was traded north into Alberta and beyond for more than 13,000 years. The trade in KRF has been documented before 2000 BCE, making the Missouri-to-Saskatchewan stone exchange one of the oldest continuously documented commercial relationships on the continent.[7][8]

Marine goods completed the long-distance picture. Copper from Lake Superior, dentalium shells from the Pacific Northwest, conch shells from the Gulf Coast, and marine shells from the Pacific Ocean all appear archaeologically in Great Plains and Saskatchewan basin sites. Archaeological explorations at The Forks (confluence of the Red and Assiniboine rivers) have produced items originating as far away as Lake Superior and northern Texas in a context dated to 1000 BCE. The Forks itself was already functioning as a provisioning and transit stop on seasonal migration routes between the northern coniferous forests and the southern plains during this period.[9][10][^11]


III. The Mandan-Hidatsa Hub: The Great Plains Entrepôt

The single most important node in the north–south trade between the Missouri and Saskatchewan watersheds was the cluster of permanent earthlodge villages of the Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara peoples along the Missouri River in what is now central North Dakota. As early as 350 CE there existed a highly developed network of trade throughout North America, with these villages serving as primary centres. The Mandan established villages near the Heart River by at least 1450 CE, and the Mandan-Hidatsa complex became known as the "Marketplace of the Central Plains".[11][9]

What made these villages so central was an agricultural surplus — corn, squash, beans, sunflowers, and tobacco — that could be exchanged with surrounding nomadic peoples for bison products, horses, and exotic goods. Visiting peoples included the Cree, Assiniboine, Cheyenne, Crow, Comanche, Kiowa, Arapaho, and Teton Sioux from every direction. Seasonal trade fairs typically occurred in late summer and early fall when the corn was ripe, with Washington Matthews recording that when the Dakota saw the blazing star blooming on the prairie, "they knew the corn was ripe, and went to the villages of the farming Indians to trade". Goods at these fairs could be compared using a standard of value — the buffalo-horse, a horse fast enough to run down a bison.[12][13][14][9]

The Mandan trade network at its height was continental in reach: dentalium shells arrived from the Pacific Northwest, and the villages acted as relay stations through which goods moved between the Missouri basin and the Saskatchewan basin in the north, the Rocky Mountains in the west, and the Missouri Valley in the south and east. Archaeological evidence of copper, Pacific shells, and obsidian at the Knife River villages confirms the physical reality of these recorded exchange relationships.[15][16][^11]


IV. Key Peoples as Brokers of the North–South Exchange

The Assiniboine (Nakoda)

No people were more central to the north–south corridor than the Assiniboine, who split from the Yanktonai Sioux around 1640 and migrated west into the northern plains. By the early 18th century their territory bridged the two watersheds, straddling what is now southern Saskatchewan in the north and the upper Missouri confluence zone in the south. They traded bison meat and pelts south to the Mandan and Hidatsa, receiving corn, squash, beans, sunflowers, and tobacco in return.[13][17]

The pivotal role of the Assiniboine as commercial and geographic intermediaries is illustrated most precisely by the 1738 journey of French explorer Pierre La Vérendrye. Operating from posts in Manitoba near Lake Winnipeg, La Vérendrye accompanied an established Assiniboine trading party south through the Turtle Mountains and along the Souris River, reaching a Mandan earthlodge village on December 3, 1738. His party of 52 people included 25 Assiniboine men and women. The Assiniboine had been conducting these journeys regularly long before La Vérendrye joined them — the route was already worn — and from 1770 to 1778 Assiniboine traders routinely carried corn and furs north from Mandan country up the Souris River to the French post of Fort La Reine, though warned by Sioux not to traffic with Europeans.[18][19][^20]

The Plains Cree

The Plains Cree emerged as major brokers of a different phase of north–south trade after 1670, when they allied initially with the Blackfoot and later with the Mandan to the south. Supplied with European firearms from Hudson's Bay Company posts at the northern end of the exchange chain, the Plains Cree became middlemen sending guns deep into the Blackfoot Confederacy while receiving bison robes, hides, and — crucially — horses in return. The alliance with the Mandan gave the Cree a southern supply of horses as well. This firearms-for-horses circulation, running north to south and south to north simultaneously along the Saskatchewan-Missouri corridor, was one of the most consequential feedback loops in 18th-century Plains history.[21][22]

The Blackfoot Confederacy

The Blackfoot Confederacy (Siksika, Kainai, Piikani) occupied the western flank of the corridor, their territory stretching from the North Saskatchewan River in the north to the Yellowstone River in Montana. Their engagement in north–south trade was inseparable from the diffusion of the horse. Around 1730 the Blackfoot were attacked by Shoshone on horseback — the first time they had encountered horses, which they named "Elk Dogs". Between 1730 and 1750 they acquired their first horses through peaceful trade with their neighbours the Flathead, Kootenai, and Nez Perce, and by the mid-18th century horses had transformed Blackfoot life and trade capacity entirely. When Anthony Henday of the Hudson's Bay Company travelled inland in 1754 and reached a Blackfoot camp of 322 lodges near present-day Red Deer, Alberta, he found a wealthy people confident enough in their resources — horses and buffalo — to decline his invitation to travel north to York Factory to trade.[23][24][25][26][^27]

The Blackfoot's strategic position astride the Old North Trail gave them influence over north–south movement along the foothills corridor. They controlled access to horses for northern peoples and in turn received guns and European goods from Cree and later from HBC and NWC posts on the North Saskatchewan River.[26][27]


V. The Horse Diffusion as a North–South Trade Event (circa 1680–1760)

The northward spread of the horse was itself the most transformative north-to-south trade movement of the pre-settlement era, and it travelled the same corridors as material goods. Horses reached the northern plains gradually from the southwest after the Pueblo Revolt of 1680 released large numbers of Spanish horses into Indigenous hands in New Mexico. Through a combination of trade and raiding, horses reached present-day southern Alberta by the 1720s. The Plains Cree acquired horses by approximately 1730. The Nakoda (Assiniboine) gained mobility on the plains when they obtained horses, allowing them to range much greater distances in pursuit of buffalo and trade. The cultural transformation was noted immediately by visiting Europeans: by the time Henday encountered the Blackfoot in 1754, horse-mounted bison hunting on a massive scale was already the dominant economy of the corridor.[24][28][29][20][^23]

The diffusion was southwest-to-northeast, but it ran through and was mediated by the same Mandan-Hidatsa villages at the Missouri that anchored north–south trade. The Mandan served as relay nodes for horses coming from the south and west and heading north, just as they relayed corn and obsidian in other directions. The Nakoda coached their Cree allies in horse culture as the animals moved northward, completing a chain that linked Mexican plateaus to the Saskatchewan River valley within roughly two generations.[30][1]


VI. Guns Moving South, Horses Moving North: The 18th-Century Exchange Engine

The dominant dynamic of the 18th-century corridor was a counter-flow: firearms and metal goods moved southward and westward from Hudson's Bay Company and later North West Company posts on the Saskatchewan; horses and agricultural products moved northward and eastward from the Missouri villages and the southern horse-breeding networks. The Cree, operating from positions along the North Saskatchewan River, were essential catalysts. Their alliance with the Mandan gave them access to horses; their access to HBC posts gave them guns to sell or trade. The Assiniboine performed a parallel role in the Souris corridor east of the Coteaux.[22][21]

This exchange had geopolitical consequences. Peoples who acquired guns and horses faster than their neighbours could project force across the corridor, displacing others. The Cree and Assiniboine alliance pushed the Atsina (Gros Ventre) out of the Saskatchewan valleys through sustained raids across the 18th century. The Blackfoot, once they acquired both horses and guns through the corridor trade, used their dual advantage to dominate a vast territory and nearly exterminate the Shoshone in battles over hunting territory between 1780 and 1805. Epidemics of smallpox, also moving along the same trade routes, reached the Assiniboine along the Souris in 1782 and cut their population dramatically before they recovered enough to resume trading operations by 1784.[27][20][^21]


VII. The HBC-Mandan Trade: Formal Documentation of the Corridor (1795–1812)

European traders did not create the north–south corridor; they inserted themselves into it. The most direct documentary evidence is the period 1795–1812, when the Hudson's Bay Company formally entered the Mandan trade. On November 12, 1795, HBC employees left Brandon House on the Assiniboine River to travel south to the Mandan villages with North West Company rivals who had already established a trade there. For the next fifteen-odd years, the HBC traded regularly with the Mandan, receiving pelts, provisions, and horses. The NWC had preceded them, and before that, French traders from Montreal had been in the trade as early as La Vérendrye's 1738 journey. The Mandan villages drew Canadian traders, St. Louis traders, and a succession of explorers including Lewis and Clark in 1804, each finding a commercial infrastructure that Indigenous peoples had maintained for centuries.[31][32][33][12]


VIII. The Old North Trail: The Western Corridor

Parallel to and west of the river-based exchange was the Old North Trail, which ran north and south along the eastern face of the Rocky Mountains from the Arctic to Mexico. The Blackfoot describe it as originating in the migration of a great tribe from the distant north, worn so deeply by generations of travellers that travois tracks and horse trails were still visible in the early 20th century. The trail forked near present-day Calgary, with one branch extending north into the Barren Lands and the main trail running south through Montana. Tribes using this corridor included the Blackfoot, Cree, Kootenai, Salish, Gros Ventre, Shoshone, and later the Métis. The Old North Trail served as the "backbone" of a trail system used for over 10,000 years, connecting the Saskatchewan basin in the north to the Missouri and beyond in the south.[34][4][35][36]


IX. Seasonal Migration and Human Movement

Trade and seasonal movement were inseparable. The north–south corridor was traversed not just by dedicated trading parties but by entire peoples following the bison. The great herds moved seasonally, and bands moved with them, creating regular cycles of contact between peoples from different watershed systems. The Assiniboine, for example, inhabited northwest North Dakota, northeast Montana, and southern Saskatchewan simultaneously and seasonally. Many groups used The Forks (present-day Winnipeg) as a rest stop in seasonal migration routes from northern coniferous forests to the southern plains. The Cree's westward expansion during the early 18th century was itself a sustained population movement through the Saskatchewan watershed toward the Missouri corridor.[37][10][38][21]

Inter-marriage was structurally embedded in this mobility. Trading gatherings — whether at the Mandan villages, at Cree meeting points on the Saskatchewan, or at neutral grounds along the Qu'Appelle — were also occasions for diplomatic alliance-making and inter-band marriage. The movement of peoples therefore produced genetic, linguistic, and cultural mixing across the corridor, making the north–south exchange zone a region of continual hybridisation long before the arrival of the Métis as a recognized distinct people.[^39]


X. Disruption and Legacy

The north–south trade system survived — indeed thrived — in the early fur trade era because European traders inserted themselves into existing networks rather than replacing them. The decisive disruptions came in sequence: smallpox epidemics (1781, 1837–38) killed enormous proportions of corridor populations, especially the sedentary Mandan and Hidatsa who were concentrated in villages and therefore most vulnerable to contagion. The drawing of the 49th parallel as an international boundary in 1818 imposed a political line across the corridor's southern Saskatchewan-northern Montana zone that had no precedent in Indigenous geography. The bison herds collapsed by the early 1880s, destroying the economic basis of the nomadic exchange system. And the arrival of the Canadian Pacific Railway in 1883 and the American Northern Pacific in 1881 finally reoriented commerce east–west, along lines of settler agriculture rather than north–south, along lines of bison migration and Indigenous trade.[31][27]

The peoples of the corridor did not vanish. Assiniboine bands settled on reserves on both sides of the Canada–US border in the 1870s. Blackfoot, Cree, and other nations whose territories had straddled the border for centuries found themselves divided between two states. The trade routes, now overgrown or paved over, persist as ghost infrastructure — visible in the alignment of some modern highways, in the place-names of river crossings, and in the archaeological record of stone tools moving from the Missouri basin to the Saskatchewan basin for more than ten millennia.[^13]


References

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  • Old North Trail - The Old North Trail which ran through the foothills along the eastern slopes of the Rocky Mountains ...
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  • Section 1: Trade