Plant Fibre Textiles from the Hopps Site: BkCp-1 (Curatorial Report #59)

Micmac and Maliseet women had developed, by the time of the first European contact with their people, a highly complex and diversified cordage and textile manufacture, using a variety of floral and faunal materials. Animal products included rawhide, tendon thread, feathers, moose and caribou hair, p...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Whitehead, Ruth Holmes
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Nova Scotia Museum 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.library.dal.ca/NSM/article/view/4009
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spelling ftdalhouseuniv:oai:ojs.pkp.sfu.ca:article/4009 2023-05-15T15:53:32+02:00 Plant Fibre Textiles from the Hopps Site: BkCp-1 (Curatorial Report #59) Whitehead, Ruth Holmes Nova Scotia; Atlantic Canada 2013-11-29 application/pdf https://ojs.library.dal.ca/NSM/article/view/4009 eng eng Nova Scotia Museum https://ojs.library.dal.ca/NSM/article/view/4009/3670 https://ojs.library.dal.ca/NSM/article/view/4009 Nova Scotia Museum; Museum Publications: 1987 plant fibres Malecite Maliseet Micmac Mi'kmaq First Nations textiles info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2013 ftdalhouseuniv 2022-02-21T08:41:28Z Micmac and Maliseet women had developed, by the time of the first European contact with their people, a highly complex and diversified cordage and textile manufacture, using a variety of floral and faunal materials. Animal products included rawhide, tendon thread, feathers, moose and caribou hair, porcupine and bird quills, and the skins, furs and hide of everything from moose and caribou, rabbit and weasel, to fish and eels. The use of faunal material in textiles has been researched rather more extensively than that of floral material. Ethnographies of Atlantic Canada, Quebec and Maine--covering Maliseet and Micmac territory-- indicate that there were a wide range of plants in use: cattails, reeds, rushes, nettles, Indian hemp, sweetgrass, spruce root, cedar bark, basswood bark, yellow-birch fibres, and a number of unidentified grasses and shoots of trees and shrubs. A number of these plant usages have been confirmed by their presence, as worked fragments, in at least five archaeological sites across the Maritimes. To date, however, there are only four published reports on the use of plant materials based on analyses of actual objects--either as they occur in sites or for the area generally. All four are incomplete or flawed._____________________________________________________________________Please note: This resource is presented as originally published. The content of older reports may not reflect the current state of knowledge on the topic documented. Please be aware of this when using this resource. Article in Journal/Newspaper caribou First Nations Malecite Maliseet Dalhousie University Libraries Journal Hosting Service Canada Indian
institution Open Polar
collection Dalhousie University Libraries Journal Hosting Service
op_collection_id ftdalhouseuniv
language English
topic plant fibres
Malecite
Maliseet
Micmac
Mi'kmaq
First Nations
textiles
spellingShingle plant fibres
Malecite
Maliseet
Micmac
Mi'kmaq
First Nations
textiles
Whitehead, Ruth Holmes
Plant Fibre Textiles from the Hopps Site: BkCp-1 (Curatorial Report #59)
topic_facet plant fibres
Malecite
Maliseet
Micmac
Mi'kmaq
First Nations
textiles
description Micmac and Maliseet women had developed, by the time of the first European contact with their people, a highly complex and diversified cordage and textile manufacture, using a variety of floral and faunal materials. Animal products included rawhide, tendon thread, feathers, moose and caribou hair, porcupine and bird quills, and the skins, furs and hide of everything from moose and caribou, rabbit and weasel, to fish and eels. The use of faunal material in textiles has been researched rather more extensively than that of floral material. Ethnographies of Atlantic Canada, Quebec and Maine--covering Maliseet and Micmac territory-- indicate that there were a wide range of plants in use: cattails, reeds, rushes, nettles, Indian hemp, sweetgrass, spruce root, cedar bark, basswood bark, yellow-birch fibres, and a number of unidentified grasses and shoots of trees and shrubs. A number of these plant usages have been confirmed by their presence, as worked fragments, in at least five archaeological sites across the Maritimes. To date, however, there are only four published reports on the use of plant materials based on analyses of actual objects--either as they occur in sites or for the area generally. All four are incomplete or flawed._____________________________________________________________________Please note: This resource is presented as originally published. The content of older reports may not reflect the current state of knowledge on the topic documented. Please be aware of this when using this resource.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Whitehead, Ruth Holmes
author_facet Whitehead, Ruth Holmes
author_sort Whitehead, Ruth Holmes
title Plant Fibre Textiles from the Hopps Site: BkCp-1 (Curatorial Report #59)
title_short Plant Fibre Textiles from the Hopps Site: BkCp-1 (Curatorial Report #59)
title_full Plant Fibre Textiles from the Hopps Site: BkCp-1 (Curatorial Report #59)
title_fullStr Plant Fibre Textiles from the Hopps Site: BkCp-1 (Curatorial Report #59)
title_full_unstemmed Plant Fibre Textiles from the Hopps Site: BkCp-1 (Curatorial Report #59)
title_sort plant fibre textiles from the hopps site: bkcp-1 (curatorial report #59)
publisher Nova Scotia Museum
publishDate 2013
url https://ojs.library.dal.ca/NSM/article/view/4009
op_coverage Nova Scotia; Atlantic Canada
geographic Canada
Indian
geographic_facet Canada
Indian
genre caribou
First Nations
Malecite
Maliseet
genre_facet caribou
First Nations
Malecite
Maliseet
op_source Nova Scotia Museum; Museum Publications: 1987
op_relation https://ojs.library.dal.ca/NSM/article/view/4009/3670
https://ojs.library.dal.ca/NSM/article/view/4009
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