Almost all native tribes have dolls, but none are so common as the Corn Husk Doll. Like the one featured above, these dolls are made from the husks of corn. Historically they were made by many of the tribes that grew corn, and each one had a different story to […]
Yearly Archives: 2014
As we slide into Fall, we’ve gotten a new list of suggestions to share from our new interactive Seasons of Change exhibit! Turn off lights – Gracee Be modest with water usage and east less meat Turn off the lights when not using them or in a different room – […]
This wonderful, tiny carving of a buffalo is a Zuni fetish carving, or a wemawe. These carvings are believed to be connected to the spirit of the animal it depicts. While the Zuni did not normally encounter buffalo near their homes, they often traveled north to hunt the buffalo or […]
For many coastal tribes, stone was hard to find. This means their craft people didn’t have many materials to make arrowheads or spear points for hunting. While tribes on the mainland may have found it hard to hunt without such tools, the coastal Natives found ways to adapt by using […]
Beads come in many different shapes and colors. The beads, called heishi, featured on this necklace are made out of coconut shell. To make the coconut shell into beads, a hole was drilled using a pump drill like the one below: The individual pieces were then strung together and shaped […]
Music is plays a huge part in every Native culture, though, each tribe has very different ways to express it. The photos above feature a rattle with a very unique shape; this rattle is flat! A common design to the First Nation’s Tribes of Canada, this flat rattle uses material […]
This mask from the Northwest Coast features one of the more fantastical beings in the Northwest Coast: Dzunuk’wa, or Wild Woman. In legend, she was twice as large as a human and rumored to carry a large basket of captured children who had wandered into her woods. She was also […]
While it looks like a woven doughnut, this ring shaped basket played an important role in the lives of many women in the Southwest. Water was often quite a distance from the home, so the women would have to gather water and materials each day. This was done with large […]
Birch bark has a wide variety of uses due to its unique nature; it peels off! Some European countries used it as paper! But many tribes used the birch as basket making material. Similar to the Swedish Easter basket, the basket featured above is woven out of strips of birch […]
How did natives make their beads? It is a question we often hear from visitors to the museum. The beads pictured above are made of clay, one of the easiest materials to use for bead making. Each tribe had access to different types of clay, so the particulars of the […]
One of the glorious things about the area, is the wildlife that we get to share it with. On June 10th, we had the pleasure of a box turtle digging a nest. She filled it with eggs and carefully put the dug soil back over the nest. We will wait […]
The Frisco Native American Museum & Natural History Center recently completed a new exhibit showcasing items that were confiscated by NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) and the US Fish and Wildlife Service. ” We were pleased when a representative from NOAA approached us to ask if we would […]