780 



REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1895. 



The figures are all painted ou the front face. In the middle is a man painted with red 

 ocher; all the rest of the figures are black and probably painted with soot. The 

 man with his arms outstretched stands on a large whale, represented as spouting. 

 He holds a small Avhale in each hand. At his right is a small cross-shaped object 

 which perhaps represents a bird, then a man facing toward the left and darting a 

 harpoon witli both hands, and a bear facing to the left. Ou the left of the red man 

 are two umiaks with five men in each, a whale nearly eftaced, and three of the crow- 

 shaped objects already mentioned. Below them also, freshly drawn with a hard, 

 blunt lead pencil or the point of a bullet, are a whale, an umiak, and a three-cornered 

 object the nature of which I can not make out. 



A similar gorget, from the same place, is sliown in fig. 4, and appears 

 to liave been long exposed to the weather, perhaps at a cemetery, as 

 the figures are'all effaced except in the middle, where it was probably 

 ''covered by a mask as in fig. 2, which was from the same village." 



DANCING GOEGET OF WOOD; FKOM POINT BAEKOW. 



Mr. Murdoch says of this that "there seems to have been a red bor 

 der on the serrated edge. In the middle is the same red man as before 

 standing on the black whale and holding a whale in each hand. At 

 his right is a black umiak with five men in it, and at his left a partially 

 effaced figure which is perhaps another boat." The strings are for 

 securing the gorget to the dancer's neck and body. 



Mr. Murdoch^ remarks of the human figure holding the whales: 

 "This man or giant, able to hold out a whale, appears to be a legend- 

 ary character, as we have his image carved in ivory. We unfortu- 



' Ninth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology for 1887-88, 1892, p. 371. 



