Figure

Wed, 2020-03-18 13:53 -- hwadmin
Summary: 
Illustrations of two different types of canoes. The top drawing is of a canoe from the south coast which is made from bark that does not allow for the ends being tied together. The water is kept out by walls of clay at each end. The bottom illustration depicts a bark canoe from Lake Tyers which has its ends tied together. Source: Smyth RB (1878) The Aborigines of Victoria. Ferres, Melbourne, p. 408.
Type: 
Figure
Sub Component: 
Normal
Slug: 
F15
Highwire: Type: 
fragment
Highwire: Parent: 
HighWire: Journal/Corpus Code: 
csirobk
Highwire: pisa_id: 
csirobk;9781486306121/1/BK07558_ch08/F15
Highwire: pisa_master: 
csirobk;9781486306121/1/BK07558_ch08/F15
HighWire: Atom Path: 
/csirobk/9781486306121/9781486306121/SEC11/F15.atom
Highwire: cpath: 
/content/9781486306121/9781486306121/SEC11/F15
Image - Large: 
Highwire: cpathalias: 
/content/csirobk/9781486306121/9781486306121/SEC11/F15
Image - Medium: 
Highwire: Variants: 
expansion
Image - Small: 
Highwire: State: 
Released
Contributors: 
<atom:author xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xmlns:hwp="http://schema.highwire.org/Journal" xmlns:nlm="http://schema.highwire.org/NLM/Journal" hwp:inherited="yes" nlm:contrib-type="author"><atom:name>Fred Cahir</atom:name><nlm:name name-style="western" hwp:sortable="Cahir Fred"><nlm:surname>Cahir</nlm:surname><nlm:given-names>Fred</nlm:given-names></nlm:name></atom:author>
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Wednesday, March 18, 2020 - 14:09