Kayaks of the Eastern Canadian Inuit
The Inuit of Baffin Island, northern Quebec and Labrador used kayaks that were more or less flat-bottomed and relatively wide, characteristics that contribute to stability. With high, rising prows that helped to override the waves, these relatively heavy kayaks were well adapted to their primary function: hunting waterfowl and sea mammals in the open sea.
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Hudson Strait kayak
Cape Wolstenholme, Quebec, 1914
CMC IV-B-494 |
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East Hudson Bay kayak
Main builder: Piitayuusi
Povungnituk, Quebec, 1959
CMC IV-B-743 |
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East Hudson Bay "two-hole" kayak,
a variety that first appeared on the Belcher Islands in the 1940s
but that has not been reported from other Canadian Inuit
Belcher Islands, Northwest Territories, 1963
CMC IV-B-825 |
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Baffin Island "retrieval" kayak,
a short but wide variety developed after the acquisition of firearms
and used to fetch seals that were shot from the edge of the floe
Cumberland Sound, Baffin Island, Northwest Territories, 1909
CMC IV-X-96 |