pipe bowl
pipe bowl
pipe bowl
Ceramic pipe bowl with possible human effigy. Haudenosaunee/Petun. Found in Nottawasaga, Ontario. Normal School Collection.
Historical Haudenosaunee or Petun.
Read More About This Relative
Clay, ceramic. Soapstone.
Engraved
May be a human figure with arms, swept back on side of bowl.
From Annual Archaeological Report of Ontario for 1891. Provincial archaeologist David Boyle wrote: "Fig. 89 is of a coarse soapstone and is considerable ruder and less marked in outline than the engraving would indicate. The position of the arms corresponds with what is found on clay pipes (see Fig. 72). The Cavity is larger than usual in pipes of this kind, the wall of the bowl being thin." See publication history below for full citation details.
Provenance
Item was found on Melville farm, Nottawasaga Township, Ontario; ROM record notes it was collected by William and David Melville.
Sketch & comment appear in the Annual Archaeological Reports of Ontario: David Boyle, "Notes on Specimens," in Fourth Annual Report of the Canadian Institute, Session of 1890-91, being an Appendix to the Report of the Minister of Education, Ontario, 1891 (Toronto: Warwick & Sons, 1891) p. 39.
Also appears in AARO 1888-89:10; Garrad Notes 1974.
A complete set of the AAROs are available in the library of the Royal Ontario Museum. This volume is also available as a digital copy through the Internet Archive (www.archive.org)
About This GRASAC Record
Unknown artist, pipe bowl. Currently in the Royal Ontario Museum, NS11100. Item photographed and described as part of a GRASAC research trip December 2008; GRASAC item id 25720.
Record created during a GRASAC trip to Royal Ontario Museum December 15 to 19, 2008. Present in the archaeology lab: Heidi Bohaker (HB), Mark Scheibmayer (MS).