Germain Arnaktauyok, The Power of Tunniq, 2006 |
Photo Credits: Tim Rast
Germain Arnaktauyok, The Power of Tunniq, 2006 |
There are trays and trays of neatly packed and labelled boxes from Boyd's Cove and hundreds of other sites in the vaults. |
They're available to researchers and are always being selected for display in new and changing exhibits. |
This is a hammerstone - notice the damage done of the right end. |
This is an iron pyrite nodule that would have been used by the Beothuk for fire starting. I was looking for this picture a couple months ago when I was writing about Why Pyrite Makes a Spark when you strike it. Better late than never. |
The collection is primarily made up of stone tools and flakes, like this little box of assort lithics. |
These tiny stemmed and corner-notched points are typical of the stone arrowheads made and used by the Beothuk. |
Another bone pendant with ochre staining. |
More little arrowheads. Some are so tiny that they may have been used on children's arrows. |
This is a trick I learned from the perfectly preserved Saqqaq Palaeoeskimo tools in Greenland. If you make knife handles in two halves then its relatively simple to carve out the socket. |
I get the blade to fit in the socket and make sure that the join between the two halves is flush before carving down the outside of the handle. |
This is one of the knives in the collection at The Rooms that I used as a reference piece. |