Anyone watched these on YouTube? Bloomin brilliant. The narration/music is a bit outdated but the footage is fascinating.
Nice to watch an Inuit fire drill in action. Wood of any kind was a prized possession.
Coast line erosion (water and ice) with ocean currents have been delivering drift wood for eons.
The slim tree trunks used for the shafts of the fishing spears for example.
I'd guess that they have been handed down for many generations.
Much use is made of whale bone skeletal remains where us "southeners" would substitute a piece of wood.
Google UBC/MOA. This is the University of British Columbia Museum Of Anthropology.
There is an ever-growing online catalog of artifacts that you can sort by subject terminology.
I intend to use it again this winter to look at designs for a new snow knife.
I have a crazy-a$$ idea that I can straighten a bison rib with steam.
I like how they use bone lures to spear fish,very good documentaries theseAnyone watched these on YouTube? Bloomin brilliant. The narration/music is a bit outdated but the footage is fascinating.