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SpoonE707-0

FROM CARD: "MADE OF THE HORN OF MOUNTAIN GOAT. DEPOSITED."

Culture
Northwest Coast
Made in
USA ? or Canada ?
Holding Institution
National Museum of Natural History
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Wooden SpoonE699-0
Basket For CarryingE685-0

FROM CARD: "DEPOSITED."

Culture
Northwest Coast
Made in
USA ? or Canada ?
Holding Institution
National Museum of Natural History
View Item Record
Bow And ArrowsE2741-0

FROM CARD: "INVENTORIED. 8/17/66. *TWO OF THE ARROWS MAY BE FROM CALIFORNIA."One bow and 7 arrows.

Culture
Northwest Coast
Made in
“United States (not certain) / Canada (not certain): California (not certain)” ?
Holding Institution
National Museum of Natural History
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Carved BowlE695-0

FROM CARD: "CARVED BOWL, WOOD, PAINTED BLACK AND RED. LOANED RENWICK GAL. 11-7-73. LOAN RETURNED 8-24-76."

Culture
Northwest Coast
Made in
USA ? or Canada ?
Holding Institution
National Museum of Natural History
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Canoe ModelE2616-0

Has original Peale # label. Information from Alan L. Hoover, 10-23-2011: This model represents what in the literature is called a manka style canoe after the Kwak'wala name for war canoe. Bill Holm spells it muhnka (also spelt munka). This is an ancient canoe type that disappeared from the coast before the era of the camera. It is known from First Nations models and a few drawings by early visitors to the coast. The bow is either very tall in the form of a vertically oriented Nootka-style prow or is more horizontal terminates in the shape of a bird's head as in the case with # E2616-0. And of course to confuse things there are prows that share characteristics of both styles. The flat-topped stern is somewhat like a Nootka-style but rather than being vertical it is raked (i.e., slopes back). Manka-style models have been collected from the Coast Salish, Nuu-chah-nulth (?), the Kwakwaka'wak, the Haida and possibly the Tlingit. There are Euro-Amerian depictions of manka style canoes in the territories of the Nuu-chah-nulth and Coast Salish, but not to my knowledge among the Haida and Tlingit. I'm still trying to figure out the relationships between versions of the "manka" (in fact is there more than one manka type) and cultural groups, but based on the northern-style two dimensional designs, my guess is that the canoe is either Haida or Tlingit in origin. Two traits that are somewhat uniqure are the vertical stern with the rearward projecting stern top and the little sculpture that is attached horizontally to it. Could the latter be a late addition - the style of the carved figure seems quite different and less accomplished than the graceful bow.

Culture
Northwest Coast
Made in
USA ? or Canada ?
Holding Institution
National Museum of Natural History
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Stone Knife. Piece Of SlateE1788-0
Bow And 5 ArrowsE2734-0

FROM CARD: "INVENTORIED 1 ARROW TO TROCADERO 1885. 8/17/66."

Culture
Northwest Coast
Made in
USA ? or Canada ?
Holding Institution
National Museum of Natural History
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Slate Totem-PoleE316926-0
Stone AdzeE724-0

FROM CARD: "DEPOSITED. #724 ILLUS. IN J. SWAN, INDIANS OF CAPE FLATTERY SMITHSONIAN INST., 1869, FIG. 15, P. 34."

Culture
Northwest Coast
Made in
USA ? or Canada ?
Holding Institution
National Museum of Natural History
View Item Record