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Showing results for the phrase "1982" in Date of Photo.
- Description
- Dzibilchaltun - Temple of the Seven Dolls - ST. 1-SUB. Architecture, Yucatan.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17377
- Description
- Distribution Map
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17252
- Description
- Wisconsin; artifacts from Prairie du Chien, and Crawford and Vernon Counties. Copper plates, celt, and discs.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17253
- Description
- Wisconsin; pot from White Group
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17254
- Description
- Wisconsin; pot from Mound #21
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17255
- Description
- Wisconsin; pot from Mound #26
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17256
- Description
- Ohio; chipped stone
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17257
- Description
- Wisconsin; chipped stone from Crawford and Vernon Counties
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17258
- Description
- Wisconsin; points from Sue Coulee (left) and Battle Island Group (right)
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17259
- Description
- Points from Minnesota (left) and Iowa (right)
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17260
- Description
- Illinois; points
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17261
- Description
- Wisconsin; chipped stone from Crawford and Vernon Counties
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17262
- Description
- Knife River Area; point- 2 views
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17263
- Description
- Knife River Area; artifacts
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17264
- Description
- Washington; map of Olympic Peninsula with site indicated
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17319
- Description
- Washington; aerial view of the site from the south
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17320
- Description
- Excavation of east wall of House II.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17321
- Description
- Excavation of House II. Note the jumble of artifacts visible, including canoe paddles, a loom support, two seal clubs and planks.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17322
- Description
- Replicated canoe in Makah Cultural and Research Center. Although deer, elk and other land mammal bones may be found at Ozette, sea mammal bones are by far the most numerous. Sea mammals, including sea lion, fur seal, hair seal, porpoise and whale were a valued source of food. Note the gear in this hunting canoe, which includes inflated floats, paddles, baskets, and mats.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17323
- Description
- Fishing paddle. Although success in hunting sea mammals almost certainly provided prestige, fishing probably provided the largest and surest source of animal protein.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17324
- Description
- Net or line sinker with groove.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17325
- Description
- Halibut hooks. These were bent by steaming, and a bone point was attached to one end with wild cherry bark. Most fishhooks were made of western hemlock.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17326
- Description
- Hook for bottom fish, including cod and sea bass. These fish could be caught throughout the year whenever the sea was calm.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17327
- Description
- Whetstone used for sharpening hooks.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17328
- Description
- Herring rake, with pointed bone teeth. Herring were harvested in the summer.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17329
- Description
- Mussel shell knife edge. The sharp, beveled edge formed by grinding on a sandstone whetstone would be very effective for cutting fish and for butchering land and sea mammals.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17330
- Description
- Whaling harpoon head haying on the cedar bark sheath in which it was found. The harpoon point, made of mussel shell, was held by two bone valves and fastend with sinew to the whaling line. Smaller harpoon heads similar to this type but with bone points were used for hunting seals, and catching salmon. In the case of whale hunting, the harpoon was not meant to kill the animal, but rather to attach seal skin floats. The drag of the floats would exha
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17331
- Description
- Bone harpoon valves minus the mussel shell blade.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17332
- Description
- Seal radius with a broken-off shell harpoon blade imbedded in it.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17333
- Description
- Hunting canoe paddle. Note the pointed end, which lessened the sound of water dripping from the paddle.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17334
- Description
- Rope made of twisted cedar limbs, used in whaling.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17335
- Description
- Seal club. Note that on one end is a representation of a seal's head, and on the other, a representation of a human head. Many utilitarian objects made by the people who lived at Ozette demonstrate a developed technology together with an extraordinary esthetic sense.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17336
- Description
- Owl club. Owls have ritual significance in this area, and it is likely that this club was a baton carried by a shaman.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17337
- Description
- Owl club, end.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17338
- Description
- Owl club, distal end. Note the echoing curve for the brow of the owl and the human-like head.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17339
- Description
- Although the Ozette people did not develop pottery, wooden boxes were used for every purpose pots could be used for, including cooking. They also were used for storage and carrying, and are often a vehicle for beautiful decoration. Ranging in size from 8 to 10 cms. Across to very large storage chests, the box sides were made from a single plank of cedar. A thin board was first grooved in three places and then steamed. When it was flexible, the boa
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17340
- Description
- Front of decorated box, showing representation of whales.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17341
- Description
- Some boxes were used for cooking by filling with water and dropping in heated stones. The bottom of this box had been burned through by a heated stone, and then repaired by sewing on a wooden patch.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17342
- Description
- Boxes were apparently deemed valuable enough to be repaired when they were damaged. Here a split side of a box was bound together.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17343
- Description
- Wooden platter, of alder wood. In a technique somewhat similar to box-making, this platter was shaped and then steamed.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17344
- Description
- Carved anthropomorphic bowl. This kind of bowl probably was used for oil. Oil bowls are common on the Northwest coast, but most are not as elaborate as this. Carved in the form of a human being with a braid of human hair, this was almost certainly used for ceremonial purposes.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17345
- Description
- Wooden club with human face. Note the stylization of the eyes which continue around to the reverse side.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17346
- Description
- Wooden club, reverse side.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17347
- Description
- Carved wooden head, possibly a stylized bird.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17348
- Description
- Woodworking tool with a beaver incisor blade at the end. Once more the care and attention expended on utilitarian objects is shown in the carefully carved head of a man wearing a hat, on the handle of the tool.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17349
- Description
- Basket made form the inner bark of the red cedar. This could have been used for storage or for collecting berries or shellfish.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17350
- Description
- Coiled basket made of spruce root. This method of manufacture is uncharacteristic of Ozette baskets, and this specimen may have been made by a slave from a neighboring group, or a trade item or potlatch gift.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17351
- Description
- Hat made of basketry. In an area as rainy as the Olympic Peninsula, rain hats are a virtual necessity. The hat is resting on its crown to show the different weaves on the inside and outside.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17352
- Description
- Flat basket made from cedar bark. Note the two kinds of checkerboard pattern. Dozens of baskets were found in one Ozette house. One, apparently a weaver's kit, contained awls, a spindle whorl, combs, blades, and a lump of red pigment.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17353
- Description
- Large cedar bark mat. Mats were used as bedding and as canoe furnishings.
- Date of Photo
- 1982
- Holdings
- 35mm slide: 17354