Welcome to blog central for ANTH 177 (Spring 2014). Students in this course maintain individual blogs in order to record their weekly lab hours and summaries, journal their brilliant thoughts about our readings, discuss our exhibit and inventory project, and generate discussion about museum-related issues, events or opportunities. This is a nuts and bolts course that complements ANTH 176: Museums, Culture & Society (an introduction to the scholarly field of museum anthropology).
That led me to some possible resources on the fish hook (if that's what you are referring to), thanks! I can see a slight similarity to the walrus tusk ornamental thing, but that's supposedly from a totally different part of the world.
ReplyDeleteNope--it is from Hawaii, Polynesia. http://data.bishopmuseum.org/ethnologydb/type.php?type=palaoa
ReplyDeleteDon't believe what you don't have scholarly citations for. Just because it says Alaska doesn't make it true ;-) . There are TONS of citations/examples of a "lei niho palaoa." Until you find me one that places one in Alaska, I'm not going to believe it. TOO distinctive a form (clearly restrung or made later for trade with tourists or visiting scholars, but I'd bet my first born on the provenience being Hawaii.
AND if you scroll down on the first webpage I pasted above (after clicking on catalogue entry), you'll see some scholarly sources.
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