|
|
|
| Maliseet |
|
|
|
»
2005 September/October Museums
|
|
Abbe Museum The Mocotaugan, or crooked knife, was an essential tool for Native people of the Northeastern Woodlands. Early European explorers described the knife as “peculiar” because of the angle of the blade to the wooden handle. Originally made using flint instead of steel, the Mocotaugan had a wide range of uses, including building canoes and wigwams, cutting strips to use in basket weaving, and making bows and arrows.
|
»
2001 May/June
By Site Editor
| Published 05/1/2001
| Navajo , Hopi , Aleut , Inuit , Iñupiat , Athabascan , Haida , Tlingit , Anishinaabe , Passamaquoddy , Penobscot , Tewa , Micmac , Ojibwe , Tsimshian , Maliseet , Diné , 2001
|
|
ON THE COVER Northwest Meets Southwest Southwestern
Native artists travel to the Pacific Northwest homelands of the Haida
people, and a group of Haida artists travels to the Southwest, to trade
new methods of creating art, forging bonds of friendship and
discovering their common natures.
Click on "Full Story" to view entire Table of Contents.
|
|
|