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Document Description
Title
Beothuk
bark
canoes
-
an
analysis
and
comparative
study
Author
Marshall
,
Ingeborg
,
1929-
Description
Thesis
(M.A.)
--
Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
1984.
Anthropology
Date
1983
Pagination
xii, 231 leaves : ill.
Subject
Indians
of
North
America--Newfoundland
and
Labrador--Boats;
Beothuk
Indians;
Degree
M.A.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Dept. of Anthropology
Discipline
Anthropology
Language
Eng
Spatial Coverage
Canada--Newfoundland and Labrador
Notes
Bibliography:
leaves
205-213.
Abstract
The
aim
of this
thesis
was to
investigate
and
test
hypotheses
concerning
the
design
and
construction
of
Beothuk
birch
bark
canoes
and their
relationship
to
craft
of
other
North
American
native
groups.
The
study
was
based
on
data
from
artifacts
in
various
museum
collections
and from
documents.
New
materials
resulting
from a
systematic
archival
search
were
used
to
supplement
known
sources.
--
Examination
of the
data
showed
that the
Beothuk
made
at
least
two
different
bark
canoe
designs.
The
more
versatile
of the
two
had a
straight
keel-line
,
no
rocker
, and the
beam
placed
abaft
midlength;
it
combined
attributes
useful
for
travel
on
inland
waters
with those that were
advantageous
for
open
water
navigation.
The
second
canoe
form
was a
strongly
rockered
deep
draft
type
especially
adapted
for
travel
conditions
on the
ocean.
Both
designs
shared
a
V-shaped
hull
form
as
well
as
stylistic
attributes
which
differentiated
them from
bark
canoes
of
other
groups.
This
interpretation
removes
an
area
of
difficulty
experienced
by
others
who
tried
to
distill
one
design
out
of
apparently
conflicting
data.
--
Beothuk
canoes
were also
compared
with
sixty-two
other
native
North
American
craft
which
revealed
that
Beothuk
bark
canoe
construction
conformed
with the
traditional
methods
used
by
other
groups.
Although
Beothuk
canoes
have been
described
as
unique
,
most
of their
attributes
were
found
on
other
North
American
canoes
or
kayaks.
The
uniqueness
derived
from
specific
combinations
of
attributes
and from the
development
of
some
of them to an
unusual
degree.
--
Analysis
of
canoes
outside
of
Newfoundland
demonstrated
that
several
attributes
were
predominantly
found
in the
North
American
north
west
including
Alaska
, the
Yukon
and the
District
of
MacKensie
but were
absent
or
rare
on the
eastern
seaboard
and
vice
versa.
A
comparison
of
Beothuk
canoe
characteristics
with those
identified
as
preferred
in
north
western
or
eastern
regions
showed
a
close
association
between
the
straight
keel-line
canoe
and
north
western
Athabascan
canoes;
the
curved
bottom
form
clearly
incorporated
functional
attributes
of
eastern
canoes
and
both
designs
had
attributes
in
common
with
skin
kayaks.
--
The
evidence
favours
the
suggestion
that a
prototype
canoe
close
to the
designs
of
Athabascan
bark
canoes
diffused
prehistorically
to the
Newfoundland
Indians
and that
major
elements
of the
ancient
design
persisted
in
both
regions.
The
V-shaped
hull
form
was a
modification
that
evolved
in
Newfoundland
,
possibly
in
emulation
of
Eskimo
Kayak
features
, and the
strongly
rockered
design
,
which
developed
at a
later
stage
represents
an
influence
of
eastern
Indian
canoe
forms.
--
The
investigation
suggests
that the
two
Beothuk
canoe
designs
reflect
periods
of
contact
with and
absorption
of
ideas
from
different
native
groups
,
ingenuity
at
developing
canoe
forms
that
met
local
requirements
and were
unique
among
North
American
bark
canoes
, and
persistence
with
ancient
design
features
as
well
as
stylistic
elements.
Type
Text
Resource Type
Electronic
thesis
or
dissertation
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
75293088
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(39.08
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Marshall_IngeborgConstanzeLuise.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
327435.cpd