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Bone Scraper (Mistcikwan)E395284-0
Part of Deerskin Clothing Set: Pair of LeggingsE74458-2
Coat Of Dressed Deer SkinE74449-0
Bark DishE395325-2
Snowshoes, Beaver TailE90149-0
Harpoon Ice Pick, BoneA392241-0
Fur And Bead OrnamentE90037-0

From card: "Under lip of bear used for mole cases."Illus. p. 263 in Turner, Lucien M., Scott A. Heyes, and K. M. Helgen. 2014. Mammals of Ungava & Labrador: the 1882-1884 fieldnotes of Lucien M. Turner together with Inuit and Innu knowledge. Identified there: "Bear onrament with beads. A beaded bear lip ornament used by the Innu, possibly as a charm, collected by Turner at Ft. Chimo. Turner recorded that the ornament originated from the Little Whale River. He apparently believed that the ornament was made from the skin of a brown bear (Ursus arctos), writing: "These mementos are procured with great difficulty from the hunter who has risked his life in the struggles attending the capture of these beasts, for the barren-ground bear of that region is nto a timid creature like the Black Bear; and unless the hunter is well prepared for the animal he would do well to let it alone" (Turner 1894: 275)."

Culture
Innu and Naskapi
Made in
Ugava Bay, Quebec, Canada
Holding Institution
National Museum of Natural History
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Pipe Bowl & StemE395327-0

From card: "Pinkish steatite in form of a hatchet, with base tapered to a thin-edge on bottom. Decorated with 2 rows of incised cross-hatching. Attached by cord from hole in base to the short wood stem. Gift of David Loutitt, 1932."

Culture
Montagnais, Fort George and Cree
Made in
Quebec, Canada
Holding Institution
National Museum of Natural History
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Bear-Claw Ring Charms 21E395301-0

From card: "Individual hollow ends of bear claws fitted into each other to form small diameter rings. These are used by the natives as charms (collected, 1933)."

Culture
Montagnais, Rupert House and Cree
Made in
Quebec, Canada
Holding Institution
National Museum of Natural History
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