Found 6,033 items held at Refine Search .
Found 6,033 items held at Refine Search .
The item search helps you look through the thousands of items on the RRN and find exactly what you’re after. We’ve split the search into two parts, Results, and Search Filters. You’re in the results section right now. You can still perform “Quick searches” from the menu bar, but if you’re new to the RRN, click the Search tab above and use the exploratory search.
View TutorialLog In to see more items.
FROM CARD: "ILLUS. IN PROCEEDINGS, USNM, VOL. 60, PL. 29, NO. 3; P. 48."Listed on page 116 in "The Exhibits of the Smithsonian Institution at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition, San Francisco, California, 1915", in section "The Spindle".
“Floor mat made by nearly all the Indians in Alaska.” per White's original catalog in the NAA.
FROM CARD: "IMITATED IN STRAW PLAIT. 2/13/67 - 2 LOCATED MARKED A & B."
This object is on loan to the Anchorage Museum at Rasmuson Center, from 2010 through 2027.From card: "Refer. Collins' MS. p. 913. USNM Bull. 127, p. 220, fig. 66." The Collins MS. entry on this canoe model, referenced above, identifies it as being carved and painted to represent the totem of the "crane" or "Tatl", with the bow terminating in the carved beak of the bird, though Tatl may actually more correctly reference a loon?Source of the information below: Smithsonian Arctic Studies Center Alaska Native Collections: Sharing Knowledge website, by Aron Crowell, entry on this artifact http://alaska.si.edu/record.asp?id=603 , retrieved 6-24-2012: Canoe Model The Haida were famous for the red cedar canoes they traded to other Native peoples of southeastern Alaska and the northwest Canada, and Haida master builders were honored for their skill. Seven styles of canoe are historically known, including this type used for fishing. The bow is painted with a bird crest design. Builders cut down large cedar trees in spring and rough-shaped the logs in the forest, then towed the half-finished boats to the village for the final adze work. They boiled water inside to soften the hull, spread apart the sides, and inserted wooden thwarts used as seats.
FROM CARD: "NECKLACE OF SHELL BEADS. FLAT DISCOIDAL BEADS. LENT TO MUSEO NACIONAL DE ANTROPOLOGIA, 5/18/64." Loan returned 2012.
From card: "Illus. in USNM Rept, 1895; fig. 206, p. 564 also in Bull. 136, USNM, pl. 140c, p. 127. Carved from a block of wood in two longitudinal sections, its interior constructed like 89,066. Design: Oala [sic, should be Olala, Oolala, Ulala], the mountain demon. On the back carved in low relief is the body and lower limbs of a man; on the front the head and chest, with the arms and hands reaching above and around the sound hole."
Provenience note: Anthropology catalogue ledger book lists a locality of Alaska for E67931 - 68019. Catalogue cards list a locality of Sitka. Alaska. It is unclear which is correct, though it is probable that the collection was purchased in Sitka.