Throwing-sticks in the National Museum - Third Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the - Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1883-'84, - Government Printing Office, Washington, 1890, pages 279-289 by Otis T. Mason
page 23 of 30 (76%)
page 23 of 30 (76%)
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PLATE V. (Mason. Throwing-sticks.) Fig. 5. Anderson River type. The specific marks are the extreme plainness of form, the lack of accommodations for the thumb and fingers, excepting the eccentric index-finger hole, the poor groove for the harpoon-shaft, and the absence of a hook or spur at the bottom of this groove. The accidental marks are cuts running diagonally across the back. In another specimen seen from the same locality the shaft groove is squared after the manner of the Cumberland Gulf type. Collected at the mouth of Anderson River, by R. Kennicott, in 1866. Museum number, 2267. Fig. 6. Point Barrow type. The specific marks are the distinct handle without finger grooves, the very eccentric index-finger hole, the method of inserting the spur for the shaft, and the harpoon-shaft groove very shallow above and deep below. In the specimens shown by Mr. Murdoch there is great uniformity of shape. Collected at Point Barrow, by Lieut. P.H. Ray, in 1883. Museum number, 89902. [Illustration: Fig. 5. Anderson River throwing-stick, front and back. Fig. 6. Point Barrow throwing-stick, front and back.] PLATE VI. |
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