142 ANIMAL EESOURCES AND FISHERIES OF UNITED STATES. 



X. PURSUIT, ITS METHODS AND APPLIANCES. 



48. Methods of transportation. 



Peri^oiial aids, 



Suow-slioes. 



Skates. 



Alpenstocks and staves. 



Portable bridges. 



Animal eqiiipmentis. 



Harness : ' 



Horse-trappings. 



Dog-liarness. 



Girths, sinches. 



Bits, cabrestos, spurs. 

 Saddles:' 



Eiding-saddles. 



Pack-saddles. 



Aparejos. 



Eiding-pads (for buffalo hunting). 



Fur pack-saddle (Hudson's Bay Territory). 

 Yehicles : ' 



Deer-sledges. 



Dog-sledges. 



Wagons. 



Dog-carts. 



Fish-carts, used in Nantucket. 



Boats. 



Hunting-boats, fishing-boats : 



Birch canoes. 

 Birch-bark canoes. 



Used by Indians in hiinting and fishing. 



26015. Bark canoe. Passamaqiioddy Indians. Eastport, Me. E. Palmer. 

 26()14. Bark canoe. Sixteen feet long, thirty-seven inches wide. Montag- 



nard Indians of Besamis. Labrador. E. H. Powell. 

 7630. Bark canoe. (Model.) Lower IngaUk, Alaska. W. H. Dall. 

 858. Bark canoe. (Model.) Chippeway Indians, Athabasca and Great 



Slave Lakes. B. E. Eoss. 

 2358. Bark caiioe. (Model; scale, about 1 inch to foot.) Northeastern 

 America. J. Varden. 



' Arranged with Ethnological series. 



