Item is a close-up image of a petroglyph pecked on a rock. According to annotation, petroglyph was pecked on granite, image was taken by E. F. Meade. Original slide included numbers 3545 and 21.
Item is a close-up image of a petroglyph pecked on a rock. According to annotations, image was taken by E. F. Meade. Original slide included numbers 3564, LC3001 and 16.
Item is a close-up image of a petroglyph pecked on a rock. According to annotations, petroglyph includes a group of three figures pecked on granite, image was taken by E. F. Meade. Original slide included number 3545.
Item is a close-up image of a petroglyph pecked on a standing rock. According to annotations, image was taken by Dick Pattinson from Alert Bay. Original slide included number 3545.
Item is a close-up image of a petroglyph pecked on a sandstone rock with a body of water on the side, probably in a beach area. According to annotations, image was taken by E. F. Meade.
Item is an image of a beach boulder with petroglyphs and surrounded by smaller stones, probably in a beach. According to annotations, image was taken by Morley Raven.
Image depicts the exhibition The Pacific Passage installed at the Vancouver International Airport. The focal point of the photograph is Hetux, a large Thunderbird sculpture created by artist Connie Watts (Nuu-chah-nulth, Gitxsan and Kwakwaka'wakw).
Image depicts a totem pole lying on the ground. Figures are difficult to identify, but the most prominent one is probably human. Read`s diary indicates that this photo was probably taken at either the Kitwanga or Kispiox village site in Gitxsan territory of the Skeena Valley..
Image depicts a row of totem poles standing along the side of a dirt road. Based on Read`s diary and the figures on these poles, this photo may have been taken in Kitwanga, and the pole on the far left may be the Dog Salmon Pole.
Image depicts a totem pole that features a human figure at the base and three other human figures, aligned horizontally across the pole. Other wooden structures can be seen in the background. Read's note indicates that a possible explanation for this pole can be found in Barbeau, p. 149, which suggests that the three humans carved in this pole may be Hrpugweelan, a crest of Ksemgitgeegyaenih, a Larhsail chief.
Image depicts a dirt road with several totem poles situated along the roadside. The poles are viewed from a distance, making it hard to identify any crests on the poles. Several wooden structures can be seen near the poles and mountains are visible in the distance.