Many artefacts made and used by native
peoples, from jewellery to boats,
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Bow, quiver
and arrows
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clothing to weapons, were recorded and examples collected
to be taken back to Britain.
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A man of Tierra
del Fuego
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The arms of the people of Tierra del Fuego
were described by Cook:
“their arms are Bows and Arrows neatly made, their
arows are bearded some with glass and others with fine flint,
several pieces of the former we saw amongst them with other
European things such as Rings, Buttons, Cloth, Canvas &
ca. which I think proves that they must sometimes travel to
the Northward, as we know of no ship that hath been in those
parts for many years, besides they were not at all surprised
at our fire arms…”
(Cook, Journal I, p.45, 16th January 1769)
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Ornaments used
by the people of Tierra del Fuego
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Objects were collected from Tierra del Fuego
on Cook’s first and second voyages
“Their ornaments of which they are extremely fond
consist of necklaces or rather Solitaires of shells and bracelets
which the women wear both on their wrists and legs, the men
only on their wrists.”
(Joseph Banks, Journal I, 227; 20th January 1769)
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Bark Cloth
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Many samples of bark cloth were brought
back from Hawaii, Tonga and the Society Islands. These two
pieces brought back by Cook from Tahiti were handed down by
Mrs Cook through the Cook family and friends. Some examples
were bound into volumes. The method of making the bark cloth
was described by Joseph Banks:
“When sufficiently soakd (ie.,the bark) the women
servants go down to the river, and stripping themselves set
down in the water and scrape the pieces of bark…dipping
it Continualy in Water until all the outer green bark is rubbd
and washd away and nothing remains but the very fine fibres
of the inner bark.”
(Banks, Journal I, 354, August 1769)
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Women beating
cloth
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Joseph Banks described the method of making
cloth after the bark had been soaked and scraped:
“they lay it upon a long piece of wood one side
of which is very Even and flat, which side is put under the
Cloth; as many women then as they can muster or as can work
at the board begin; each is furnishd with a battoon made of
very had wood calld by the native Etoa these are about a foot
long and square with a handle; on each of the 4 faces of the
square are many small furrows of as many different fineness…with
the coarsest then they begin, keeping time with their strokes
in the same manner as smiths or Anchor smiths, and continue
until the Cloth which extends itself very fast under these
strokes shews by the too great thinness of the Grooves which
are made in it that a finer side of the beater is requisite;
in the same manner they proceed to the finses side with which
they finish.”
(Banks, Journal I, 354-5, August 1769)
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Carving knife
of New Zealand
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This shark-tooth knife collected in New
Zealand on the second voyage is probably the one obtained
by someone on the Adventure and given
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to the Admiralty by Captain Furneaux. Furneaux’s
collection was given by the Admiralty to the British Museum
as early as 1775.
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Trumpet made
of shell New Zealand
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This shell trumpet was collected by the
Forsters from a group of Maoris in Queen Charlotte Sound,
New Zealand in 1773.
“They also brought some musical instruments, among
which was…(a) trumpet…made of a large whelk (murex
tritonis), mounted with wood, curiously carved, and pierced
at the point where the mouth was applied; a hideous bellowing
was all the sound that could be procured.”
(G. Forster, A Voyage round the World in His Britannic Majesty’s
Sloop, Resolution…, 1777, 277)
Forster later gave it to a friend, Thomas Pennant, and it
is now in the University Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology,
Cambridge.
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Dart from New
Zealand
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Study of a Maori
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Patoo patoos
or bludgeons from New Zealand
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Many weapons were collected on Cook’s
voyages, including hand clubs made of wood, bone, whalebone,
greenstone and basalt from New Zealand. Cook said of the Maori:
“The Arms they use are Long spears or lances…they
have short Truncheions about a foot long, which they call
Pattoo Pattoos, some made of wood some of bone and others
of stone, those made of wood are variously shaped, but those
made of bone and stone are of one shape, which is with a round
handle a broadish blade which is thickest in the middle and
tapers to an edge all round, the sue of these are to knock
mens brains and to kill them outright after they are wounded:
and they are certainly well contrived things for this purpose.”
(Cook, Journals I, p.200-1, November 1769)
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Weapons from
New Zealand
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“Battle axes made… of a very hard wood about
6 feet long, the bottom of the handle pointed, and the blade
which is perfectly like the blade of an axe but broader made
very sharp…Darts about 8 feet long made of wood bearded
and sharpned, but intended chiefly for the defence of their
forts where they have the advantage of throwing them from
a hight down upon their enemy…besides these the chiefs
when they came to attack us carried in their hands a kind
of ensign of distinction in the same manner as ours, or spontoons:
they were either the rib of a Whale as white as snow carvd
very much and ornamented with dogs hair and feathers, or a
stick about 6 feet long carvd and ornamented in the same manner
and generally inlayd with shell like mother of Pearl.”
(Banks, Journal II, 28, March 1770)
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