Abaya Martin slicing fish for sun-drying
- 132-1-C-A-a040356
- Item
- 1952
Part of MOA General Media collection
Abaya Martin slicing fish to be sun-dried.
Abaya Martin slicing fish for sun-drying
Part of MOA General Media collection
Abaya Martin slicing fish to be sun-dried.
Cannery, partially processed salmon
Photograph of piles of partially processed salmon in a cannery.
Cannery, partially processed salmon
Photograph of a pile of partially processed salmon in a cannery.
Cannery, partially processed salmon
Photograph of a pile of partially processed salmon in a cannery.
Part of Stanley E. Read fonds
Image depicts a rack set up in a clearing where fish appear to be drying. The area around the rack is scrub land and mountains can be seen in the distance.
Part of MOA General Media collection
Image of fish and what appears to be seaweed drying. The slide label appears to describe the people as Athabascan but this is uncertain. This image may be from a book by Marius Barbeau or Edward Linnaeus Keithahn.
Part of MOA General Media collection
Image of fish and what appears to be seaweed drying. The slide label appears to describe the people as Athabascan but this is uncertain. This image may be from a book by Marius Barbeau or Edward Linnaeus Keithahn.
Part of MOA General Media collection
Image of fish being hubg to dry, according to caption on slide. The origins of this photograph are uncertain.
Photograph of a fish processing line, likely in a canning factory.
Fishery Bay on Nass [River], oolichan fishery
Part of Harry B. Hawthorn fonds
Image of a eulachon fishery in Fishery Bay, seen from the Nass RIver. The fishery is along the shore, with mountains in the background.
Part of Hilary Stewart fonds
Images of net fishing in the Fraser River Canyon with traditional Indigenous fish processing techniques.
This file contains images of Coast Salish and Kwakwaka'wakw artifacts. Many of the photos are official photographs taken by various museums in Canada and the United States, but others are historical photos. These artifacts include masks, rattles, carvings, fishing equipment and fish processing, canoes, and North Coast architecture, such as long houses and house posts.
File mainly contains historical images of the Heiltsuk, Nuxalk, and Wuikinuxv First Nations. These images depict village life, architecture and house posts, and regalia. The file contains images of a group of Nuxalk who traveled to Berlin to perform there. Images that are not historical depict a ceremony happening in the Great Hall at UBC MOA, unidentified artists working on a set of drawings, and what appears to be the Acwsalcta High School in Bella Coola. Non textual records include photocopies of photographs, and photocopies of museum catalogue cards.
Part of MOA General Media collection
Item is an image showing a woman preparing fish.
C. MacKay
Preparing salmon, Kingcome Inlet
Part of Anthony Carter fonds
Image of Kingcome Inlet resident Mrs. Sam Weber preparing salmon for the smokehouse. A similar image is printed on page 45 of Carter's book From History's Locker.
Anthony Carter
File contains a combination of historical photographs depicting village life of the Coast Salish people, and modern day photographs of Salish artifacts housed in various museums around the world. The historical photographs contain images of Coast Salish peoples, totem poles, house posts, canoes, and petroglyphs. The modern day photographs contain images of Coast Salish artifacts such as blankets, spindle whorls, masks, carvings, house posts and totem poles, and household items such as combs and bowls. The textual records contained in this file are photocopies of images of Coast Salish artifacts housed in various museums around the world.
Photograph of a fish processing line, likely in a canning factory. This image shows a cart full of partially processed salmon, with two worked in the background.
Tsilhqot'in/Secwepemc/Stl'al'lmx/Nlaka'pamux
The majority of the file contains historical images of the Tsilhqot'in, Secwepemc, Stl'al'lmx, and the Nlaka'pamux peoples. The photographs depict village life, including images of building structures in the BC interior, fish processing techniques such as fish drying, and carvings such as mortuary poles. Some of the images also depict First Nations people, some in regalia. The other images are official photographs taken by various museums in Canadian and American museums of Tsilhqot'in, Secwepemc, Stl'al'lmx, or Nlaka'pamux artifacts. The textual records contained in this file consist of a photocopy of a magazine article titled "Upstairs, downstairs: the early years," written by Heather Pringle, and published in the June 1996 (Volume 111, number 5) edition of the magazine Saturday Night.
Photograph of women working in a cannery.