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Birch Bark Biting: Background

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05 March 2010

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Birch Bark Biting


by Jessica Wesaquate and Andrea Rogers

 

"Tansi ... Hello"

Birch bark biting is the art of dentally perforating designs on intricately folded sheets of paper-thin bark. The technique is known to have been practised by Ojibwa (or Chippewa), Cree and other Algonquian groups who used birchbark extensively in fabricating domestic containers, architectural coverings, canoes and pictographic scrolls. Bark biting was a casual art among Aboriginal women, a means of experimenting with designs that might later be translated into porcupine quill or bead appliqué on bark containers or hide clothing. It was a form of recreation or friendly competition.


Work Cited:

Elizabeth McLuhan and M. Zoccole, Wigwas: Birch Biting by Angelique Merasty (1983).

 

 

Aboriginal Perspectives is supported by the University of Regina, the Imperial Oil Foundation, the Canadian Mathematical Society and the Pacific Institute for the Mathematical Sciences.

 

 

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Tukisigiarviit: DIAMA