ONTARIO SESSIONAL PAPERS, 1914, . Double-headed Owl Pipe. Innisfll Town-ship (a). Double headed Owl Pipe,ship (&), Innisfil Town- Material: Polished black steatite, evidently slainorl. This massive pipe hasa plain unornamented surface^; represents the horned owl. There are three deep cutsor grooves on top of each head. All the eyes are large and shallow. The beaksare not prominent. The left head is facing more to the left side than the right head faces directly to the front. There is i/o inch space between grooves on the heads make quite distinct ears, giving an appea
ONTARIO SESSIONAL PAPERS, 1914, . Double-headed Owl Pipe. Innisfll Town-ship (a). Double headed Owl Pipe,ship (&), Innisfil Town- Material: Polished black steatite, evidently slainorl. This massive pipe hasa plain unornamented surface^; represents the horned owl. There are three deep cutsor grooves on top of each head. All the eyes are large and shallow. The beaksare not prominent. The left head is facing more to the left side than the right head faces directly to the front. There is i/o inch space between grooves on the heads make quite distinct ears, giving an appearance to someaboriginal clay pipes. Th<^ large frontal projection has a horizontal hole through from sidn to side AlKUzEOLOiJlCAl. ja<:iui;T. 51 wiili a diainetor ol ,4 iiH-li. Tliere is no suspensory hole. The bowl has beenbured with a tapering or conical drill and has gouge marks at top. The stem holeis in the back and is quite large, and has been bored with a blunt, wide drillleaving the hole with a roniulcij hoi loin, i l
Size: 951px × 2629px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., bookauthorontariolegislativeass, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910