A Handbook for Visitors to the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum of Polynesian Ethnol

Cover A Handbook for Visitors to the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum of Polynesian Ethnol
A Handbook for Visitors to the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum of Polynesian Ethnol
Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum
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15 ; these clubs are often made of jade and sometimes of considerable size and value; jade was also used for beads and other ornaments. Another peculiar club is made of wood with the head fashioned into the likeness of a bird's bill, Nos. 1338, 1339 (Fig. 38).
- \ FIG. 35. IMAGES WITH HTMAX SKI'U. S.
stone, No. 7417. A cane used tograph of its use, No. 7431.
A netted calabash used for water, No. 1931, the net permanently attached. In throwing their spears the New Caledonians in- creased the for
...ce by a sling. A short round club of some heavy wood, No. 1387. Still another club with a bud-like head, No. 1937 (Fig. 38). The braided flat cords, No. 1936, are the principal covering of a man. The long kabala or apron at the. Top of this case is from the Duke of York Islands.
Australia. The many well managed museums of Australia and their valuable publications have made the aboriginal imple- ments and customs better known than those of most parts of the re- gion that falls within the view of this Museum, and we have here a fair series illustrating Australian antiquities.


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