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Mask | Humanoid | Replica2.5E655C
Canoe Paddle1-584

The pigment is black.

Culture
Coast Salish: Quinault
Material
yew wood, red cedar wood and pigment
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
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Carving2.5E1039

The paint is red, black, and blue.

Culture
Tlingit
Material
cedar wood and paint
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
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Canoe Paddle2437

The paint is black, red, and green.

Culture
Tlingit: Sitka
Material
yellow cedar wood and paint
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
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Arrows | Bows | Club1-2076

The paint is red, green, yellow, white, and black.

Culture
Coast Salish: Snuneymuxw
Material
wood, paint, western red cedar, cord and cedar bark
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
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Feast Tray | Fragment2176
Canoe Ornament1941
Spruce Canoe Model2.5E1052
Model Canoe | Model Canoe Bailer | Model Canoe Paddle1993-46/7

The paint is red, blue, and black.

Culture
Nuu-chah-nulth ? or Makah ?
Material
wood and paint
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
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Pipe | Chief Shakes'2.5E561

As soon as northern Northwest Coast people acquired from Euro-American seamen the custom of smoking tobacco rather than chewing or sucking it, they began to make pipes. Those they made for their own use were usually of wood, with the bowl reinforced or made of metal. Sometimes this metal, which protected the wooden pipe from the heat of the burning tobacco, was merely a lining of copper. The favorite material for pipe bowls, however, was a section of musket barrel. By the early nineteenth century, firearms had come into common use all over the coast, obtained from Euro-American traders. (Holm, Spirit and Ancestor, 1987)

Culture
Tlingit: Stikine
Material
wood, iron metal, abalone shell, human hair and paint
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
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