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Canoes: A Natural History in North America
Long-Nose Canoe
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The Ojibwe (also called Chippewa) built different styles of canoes, including this distinctive long-nose model.
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Long-Nose Canoe
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From
Canoes: A Natural History in North America
by Mark Neuzil and Norman Sims
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Technical Info
The canoe was made by members of the Bear Island band, near Leech Lake, Minnesota. Tappan Adney considered the long-nose design as originating with the Dakota before they were forced from the Lake Superior region by the Ojibwe and Cree.
Creator(s)
Cullen, Michael
Subjects
History
Cultural Studies
Literature
Native American Studies
Regional Studies
Related Section
Chapter 2: Birch-Bark Canoes
Keywords
birch bark
Minnesota
Ojibwe
Content Type
photograph
Citable Link
Citable Link
Rightsholder
Canadian Canoe Museum
Copyright Status
in-copyright
Rights Granted
non-exclusive, world-wide, perpetual
Credit Line
Photograph by Michael Cullen, courtesy of the Canadian Canoe Museum.
Holding Contact
Canadian Canoe Museum
File Format
jpeg (JPEG File Interchange Format)
File Size
1.67 MB
Width
3048
Height
2028
Mime Type
image/jpeg
Last Modified
2023-03-13T02:36:23Z
Original Checksum
f0df457462da65dc108c1f9e1cc7bd46
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