Accession No
Z 45064 C
Description
Harpoon foreshaft made of bone. Rounded, rectangular cross-section; straight sides; one end squared with blade slot and central perforation; longitudinal groove runs from perforation to blade slot edge on both faces; other end features a long, chisel-like terminal below a slight stepped collar.
Place
Arctic; North America; Canada; Nunavut; Foxe Basin; Melville Peninsula; Avvajja [Abverdjar]
Period
?Thule ?Inuit
Source
Rowley, Graham Westbrook [collector and donor]; Bazin, Étienne (Father) [collector]
Department
Arch
Reference Numbers
Z 45064 C
Cultural Affliation
Material
Bone
Local Term
Measurements
94mm
Events
Context (Related Documents)
Note with Z 45064 A-G reads: 'These seven specimens were part of the priests collection from Abverdjar but from their appearance are obviously different from the rest of the collection and are probably either surface finds or mixed in by mistake by the Eskimo or at the priests house.'
Event Date
Author: Imogen Gunn (admin)
Context (Field collection)
Found by Inuit in 1933 whilst they were ‘cutting turf for the walls of their houses and digging mud to shoe the runners of the komatiks’ (Rowley 2007, p. 88), and given to Father Étienne Bazin. Father Bazin gave the collection to Graham Rowley in March 1937. See archive (XA/1/35 and XA/1/39).
Event Date 1933
Author: maa
Context (References)
Rowley, G. (1940). ‘The Dorset culture of the eastern Arctic’. American Anthropologist, vol. 42(3). pp 490-499.
Event Date 1940
Author: Zahni Blumenthal
Description (Physical description)
Worked bone.
Event Date 1950
Author: maa
Context (References)
Rowley, G. (2007). Cold Comfort: My Love Affair with the Arctic. 2nd edition. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press.
Event Date 2007
Author: Zahni Blumenthal
Description (Physical description)
Harpoon foreshaft made of bone. Rounded, rectangular cross-section; straight sides; one end squared with blade slot and central perforation; longitudinal groove runs from perforation to blade slot edge on both faces; other end features a long, chisel-like terminal below a slight stepped collar.
Event Date 20/8/2024
Author: Zahni Blumenthal
FM:26766
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