Showing items held at 13 different institutions.
Showing items held at 13 different institutions.
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NASKAPI? DEERSKIN MITTENS IN EXHIBIT BOOK AS NO. 1336 WHICH IS MOCCASINS ON SAME MANNEQUIN, MOCS LISTED WRONGLY AS 90062 WHICH IS ANOTHER PAIR OF MOCS.MITTENS PHOTOGRAPH (NEG 79-10902) AS NO. 74458 WHICH IS DEERSKIN 3 PIECE SUIT (COAT/LEGGINGS ON EXHIBIT,PANTS.
From card: "Soft soled; beadwork floral design on red strouding over the instep; lined in flannel. Correct descriptions should be: People: Northeast Indians; Locality: Northeast Woodlands - W. Sturtevant Curator, n. Amer. Ethn. (4/85)".
Originally catalogued as made of sealskin, but this is not correct; appears to be caribou.Illus. p. 97 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 as "Caribou skin sleeping bag (1884). A sleeping bag used and collected by Turner at Ft. Chimo. He noted that the sleeping bag was a European concept co-opted by some Inuit. It measures 7' x 3' x 8". Turner wrote about its comfort: "The Arctic traveler who has once indulged in sleep within the soothing folds of a soft reindeer skin sleeping-bag will be loath to expose himself to the vagaries of an uncomfortable bed and shifting blankets." Turner (1887a: 703) noted that pogaluk was the Inuit word for sleeping bag." Sleeping bag is also further described on pp. 96-97 of the publication.
Accession record notes that items in this collection were "found in ancient Huron Indian Graves"