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Lifelines: Canada's East Coast Fisheries

Cross Currents
500 Generations of Aboriginal Fishing 
in Atlantic Canada
 
Sea Mammals
Cross Currents: 
500 Generations of Aboriginal Fishing in Atlantic Canada

 

Beothuk Canoe

Designed for open water and used for hunting sea mammals, the Beothuk birchbark canoe was stable enough to heel over without taking on water as the animals were landed. The exaggerated gunwales and keel of this canoe distinguish it from other Eastern Algonkian types. Although no full-size example of a Beothuk canoe is known to exist today, construction details are contained in personal accounts and models left as grave offerings. In 1612, an early chronicler described Beothuk canoes as, "about 20 feet long and 4-1/2 feet wide, could carry four persons, and weighed less than a hundredweight [45 kg]."


Birchbark Model of Beothuk Deep-Water Canoe - 
III-A-1 - Photograph: David Keenlyside

Birchbark Model of Beothuk Deep-Water Canoe
Edwin Tappan Adney
ca. A.D. 1900
Length: 43 inches
Collection: Canadian Museum of Civilization, III-A-1


Design

 

 
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