Hook
Item number 1949.219 B from the MAA: University of Cambridge.
Item number 1949.219 B from the MAA: University of Cambridge.
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Two V-shaped trolling fish hooks with flexible whalebone snoods or shafts, and bone points lashed on with cherry bark.; Good
Catalogue card gives provenance as Columbia River, making them Chinook in origin.The original European tribal names and, where possible, current tribal names have both been given in separate GLT fields.; Trolling hooks were attached to a line in a series and were pulled behind a canoe. They were used for catching spring salmon, cod.; Collected in
This data has been provided to the RRN by the MAA: University of Cambridge. We've used it to provide the information on the Data tab.
Catalogue card gives provenance as Columbia River, making them Chinook in origin.The original European tribal names and, where possible, current tribal names have both been given in separate GLT fields.; Trolling hooks were attached to a line in a series and were pulled behind a canoe. They were used for catching spring salmon, cod.; Collected in
Two V-shaped trolling fish hooks with flexible whalebone snoods or shafts, and bone points lashed on with cherry bark.; Good
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