Throwing-sticks in the National Museum eBook

Otis Tufton Mason
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 25 pages of information about Throwing-sticks in the National Museum.

Throwing-sticks in the National Museum eBook

Otis Tufton Mason
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 25 pages of information about Throwing-sticks in the National Museum.

A freshly-made implement, looking as if cut out by machinery, resembling closely those just described, is labeled Kadiak.  The constant traffic between Bristol Bay and Kadiak, across the Alaskan peninsula, may account for the great similarity of these implements.  Furthermore, since the natives in this region and southward have been engaged for more than a century in fur-sealing for the whites, there is not the slightest doubt that implements made by whites have been introduced and slightly modified by the wearer to fit his hand.

KADIAK OR UNALASHKA TYPE.

In the National Museum are four throwing-sticks, one of them left-handed, exactly alike—­two of them marked Kadiak and two Unalashka (Figs. 20-22).  They return to the more primitive type of the area from Kotzebue Sound to Greenland, indicating that the implement culminated in Norton Sound.  In outline this southern form is thin and straight-sided, and those in possession are all of hard wood.  The back is carved in ridges to fit the palm of the hand and muscles of the thumb.  There is no thumb-groove, the eccentric index-finger hole of the Northern and Eastern Eskimo is present in place of the central cavity of the area from Kotzebue Sound to Cape Vancouver, and there is a slight groove for the middle finger.  Marks 5 and 6 are wanting.  The shaft-groove is very slight, even at its lower extremity, and runs out in a few inches toward the handle.  The hook for the end of the weapon resembles that of Nunivak, but is more rounded at the point.  Of the Eskimo of Prince William Sound, the extreme southern area of the Eskimo on the Pacific, Captain Cook says, in the narrative of his last voyage:  “Their longer darts are thrown by means of a piece of wood about a foot long, with a small groove in the middle which receives the dart.  At the bottom is a hole for the reception of one finger, which enables them to grasp the piece of wood much firmer and to throw with greater force.”  Captain Cook’s implement corresponds exactly to the specimens just described and renders it probable that this thin, parallel-sided, shallow-grooved throwing-stick, with index-finger hole placed at one side of the spear-shaft groove, extended all along the southern border of Eskimoland as far as the Aleuts of Unalashka and Attoo.  In addition to the information furnished by the specimens in hand, Dr. Stejneger describes a similar stick in use in the island of Attoo.  On the contrary, Mr. Elliott assures me that Aleutian fur-sealers of Pribylov Island use throwing-sticks precisely similar to those of Norton Sound and Nunivak.

This list might be extended further by reference to authorities, but that is from the purpose of this article and the series of ethnological papers commenced in this volume.  The most perfect throwing-stick of all is that of the Mahlemut, in Norton Sound, in which are present the handle, thumb-groove, finger-grooves, and pegs, cavities for the finger-tips, index finger cavity, shaft-groove, and hook for the harpoon.  In short, all the characteristics present on the rest are combined here.

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Throwing-sticks in the National Museum from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.