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Boots, Child's60.1/5435 AB
Pouch60.1/5434
Unborn Baby Seal Skin60.1/5433

Culture
Eskimo
Material
hide and fur
Made in
Labrador, Canada
Holding Institution
American Museum of Natural History
View Item Record
Skin Of Bearing Seal60.1/5432

Culture
Eskimo
Material
hide and seal fur
Made in
Labrador, Canada
Holding Institution
American Museum of Natural History
View Item Record
Sl IP Pers (Pair), Baby60.1/5431 AB
Model, Coat60.1/5430
Wh IP, Large60.1/5184

Culture
Eskimo
Material
wood and hide
Made in
Labrador, Canada ?
Holding Institution
American Museum of Natural History
View Item Record
Pouch50.2/2533
spear1927.1734 . 176455

« The collection contains a heavy spear for killing caribou in the water, presumably from a canoe. The point, made of moose antler and with a single large barb, tapers toward the proximal end which is inserted into a hole in the long wooden shaft. At the distal end the shaft is split slightly and notched to receive strips of moose hide lashing which extend up onto and around the proximal end of the point (fig.2). Shorter, lighter versions of this spear were used for taking beaver and the collection contains the shaft of a model beaver spear; the point is missing. The shaft is round and 60.2 cm in length with a slit in the distal end into which the point would have been fitted. Narrow creases in the wood indicate that the point was held in place with sinew. » Vanstone, James W. "The Speck Collection of Montagnais Material Culture from the Lower St. Lawrence Drainage, Quebec." Fieldiana. Anthropology. New Series, No. 5 (October 29, 1982), p.6, fig 2 (p.30).

Culture
Ilnu, Montagnais and Innu
Material
moose antler
Made in
Pekuakami, Lac Saint-Jean, Lake St. John, Labrador, Canada
Holding Institution
The Field Museum
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rabbit skin robe1927.1734 . 176453

« The manufacture of woven hare skin blankets by Indians of the Mistassini and Lake St. John bands is described in detail by Speck (1930, pp. 451-454), Lips (1947, pp. 42, 44), and Rogers (1967, p. 64, fig. 8, p. 40). Speck (1930, p. 454) notes that 100 skins were required for a blanket, while Rogers (1967, p. 64) states that a large blanket to be used by three people might comprise twice that many skins. These blankets were woven of narrow, twisted strips of hare skin on a three-pole frame by a coil netting technique in which the strip of skin was conveyed by a wooden or bone needle. The Speck collection contains two examples. The smaller, in poor condition, measures approximately 165 by 145 cm. The larger measures 220 by 152 cm and has short cloth ties at the four corners. It may have been worn as a robe. » Vanstone, James W. "The Speck Collection of Montagnais Material Culture from the Lower St. Lawrence Drainage, Quebec." Fieldiana. Anthropology. New Series, No. 5 (October 29, 1982), p.17.

Culture
Ilnu, Montagnais and Innu
Material
rabbit skin
Made in
Pekuakami, Lac Saint-Jean, Lake St. John, Labrador, Canada
Holding Institution
The Field Museum
View Item Record