Log Canoe on the Columbia River
From Chapter 1: Dugout Canoes
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From Chapter 1: Dugout Canoes
Lee Moorhouse, Log canoe on the Columbia River, ca. 1900.
From Chapter 1: Dugout Canoes
Woodcut illustration of a Taino dugout canoe, Girolamo Benzoni’s La Historia del Mondo Nuovo, 1562.
From Chapter 1: Dugout Canoes
Florida dugout canoe and typical Timucua houses, 1591, engraving by Theodor de Bry after Jacques Le Moyne.
From Chapter 1: Dugout Canoes
Contemporary dugout photographed at Playa de San Mateo del Mar near Oaxaca, Mexico.
From Chapter 1: Dugout Canoes
Inscriptions on bone from the Late Classic Era Mayan burial site at Tikal (ca. 800–ca. 1000 CE), redrawn by Linda Schele, artist and Mesoamerican scholar.
From Chapter 1: Dugout Canoes
Fresco featuring Putun dugout canoes, interior walls of the Temple of the Warriors, Chichen Itza.
From Chapter 1: Dugout Canoes
Drawing by John White (~1585–1593), inscribed The manner of their fishing and A Cannow.
From Chapter 1: Dugout Canoes
Kryn Frederycks woodcut titled T’ Fort Nieuw Amsterdam op de Manhatans, ca. 1626.
From Chapter 1: Dugout Canoes
The oyster industry of the East Coast relied on dugout canoes to navigate the rivers of Connecticut during the nineteenth century. This photograph dates to 1872 and depicts a dugout next to an oyster house near New Haven.
From Chapter 1: Dugout Canoes
Archeologists examine a dugout canoe found during a drought in 2000 at Newnans Lake, Florida.
From Chapter 1: Dugout Canoes
John Webber, Tereoboo, King of Owyhee, bringing presents to Capt. Cook.
From Chapter 1: Dugout Canoes
Dugout canoes line the beach at Songhees Reserve in Victoria, British Columbia, 1868.
From Chapter 1: Dugout Canoes
A Kwakiutl family navigating the waters of Quatsino Sound.
From Chapter 1: Dugout Canoes
British botanist and ethnographer Charles F. Newcombe photographed this newly hewn Haida dugout canoe at the village of Kasaan, Alaska, along the Northwest Coast, c. 1900.
From Chapter 1: Dugout Canoes
Three cedar canoes on the beach at Skidegate.
From Chapter 1: Dugout Canoes
Old-growth cedar trees are immense and can provide the materials for several boats. In this photograph, four different canoes are being hewn from one red cedar log at Olympic Loop, Queets River, Washington. Photograph by Dale O. Northrup, c. 1930.
From Chapter 1: Dugout Canoes
The Manner of Makinge Their Boates, Theodor de Bry, 1590.
From Chapter 1: Dugout Canoes
Bill Reid and Associates Creating a Dugout Canoe, 1985.
From Chapter 1: Dugout Canoes
Haisla dugout canoe carved and painted by David Shaw in 1934, overpainted by Bill Reid in 1967.
From Chapter 1: Dugout Canoes
Graham Herbert (Hornby Island, British Columbia), Sacred Escort, 1994. Watercolor on paper, 36.83 x 52.07 cm.
From Chapter 1: Dugout Canoes
Edward S. Curtis, Into the Shadow, 1910. Clayoquot Sound, British Columbia.
From Sidebar: Napolean Sanford
Napolean Sanford
From Sidebar: Napolean Sanford
Napolean Sanford with a work in progress next to the Carib Council House in Salybia, Dominica.
From Sidebar: Napolean Sanford
Gommier trees grow to enormous size in the rain forests of Dominica.
From Sidebar: Napolean Sanford
Dugout fishing canoes on the beach in Martinique.
From Sidebar: Napolean Sanford
Napolean Sanford's Storm Petrel.
From Chapter 3: The Fur Trade
The fragile nature of the wooden canoe is evident in this old campaigner, found near the Takhini River in the Yukon in 1995 by the Lake Laberge Archaeology Project.
From Chapter 4: All-Wood Canoes
A trapper’s dugout canoe constructed of basswood.
From Chapter 5: Wood-and-Canvas Canoes
Alice Zalonis Brylawski stands in a dugout canoe at a Wooden Canoe Heritage Association MiniAssembly at Gifford Pinchot State Park in Pennsylvania in 2012.