- 131-a040238
- Pièce
- February 1987
Fait partie de Joi Carlin fonds
Image is of Norman performing his squirrel dance on top of the canoe log while two family members hold and beat skin drums. All three have their back to the camera.
Fait partie de Joi Carlin fonds
Image is of Norman performing his squirrel dance on top of the canoe log while two family members hold and beat skin drums. All three have their back to the camera.
Fait partie de Joi Carlin fonds
Image is of Norman performing his squirrel dance on top of the canoe log while Mercy stands watching him with her back to the camera on the left side of image. Another Tait member appears on the right side of image holding a drum.
Native Brotherhood, Stony Mt. Pow Wow dancers at U of W
Fait partie de E. Polly Hammer fonds
Saxmen Tlinget dancing at Totem Bite [Bight], Ketchikan, Alaska
Fait partie de E. Polly Hammer fonds
Fait partie de Virginia Kehoe fonds
Image depicts several women and children dancing outdoors. Others play drums in the background.
Fait partie de Anthony Carter fonds
Image of a salmon weir on the Cowichan River, Vancouver Island. The weir is seen from a slight distance up or down the river.
Sans titre
Fait partie de Anthony Carter fonds
mage of three individuals standing on the platform of a fishing weir on the Cowichan River, holding spears. A similar image is printed on page 15 of Carter's book "From History's Locker," with the caption: "Salmon weir on the Cowichan river, the native people continue a very ancient form of spear fishing for migrating salmon. The weir is not a trap but merely a means to slow the fish on the way up the river."
Sans titre
Fait partie de Anthony Carter fonds
mage of three individuals standing on the platform of a fishing weir on the Cowichan River, holding spears. A similar image is printed on page 15 of Carter's book "From History's Locker," with the caption: "Salmon weir on the Cowichan river, the native people continue a very ancient form of spear fishing for migrating salmon. The weir is not a trap but merely a means to slow the fish on the way up the river."
Sans titre
Fait partie de Anthony Carter fonds
mage of three individuals standing on the platform of a fishing weir on the Cowichan River, holding spears. A similar image is printed on page 15 of Carter's book "From History's Locker," with the caption: "Salmon weir on the Cowichan river, the native people continue a very ancient form of spear fishing for migrating salmon. The weir is not a trap but merely a means to slow the fish on the way up the river."
Sans titre
From all over the place, woman fishing
Fait partie de Anthony Carter fonds
Image of a woman fishing from a small boat.
Sans titre