
1916/07/13 or earlier
wood, bird feather, mammal sinew
A single arrow with a wooden shaft, fletching made of feathers, and a sinew binding is displayed against a plain gray background. A color calibration strip and identification text are visible at the bottom. The Inuinnaq (Copper Inuit) were so named because of their use of nearly pure raw copper to make a variety of edged tools. During the brief arctic summer, the people dispersed in small groups of two or three families, wandering over the interior tundra plains to hunt caribou and fish. As camps were moved every few days, possessions were kept to an absolute minimum. Diamond Jenness spent the summer of 1915 living such a life with his hosts Ipakhuak and Higilak, on the rolling tundra of southwestern Victoria Island. Inuinnaq…
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