Bark canoes, a bibliography.
- anon.: Barkbåde.
Vikingeskibshallen, Roskilde, 1981. 79 pp, ill.
A detailed and well-illustrated account of the building of a bark canoe by two algonquin indians.
- Adney, E.T. & Chapelle, H.I.: The Bark Canoes and Skin Boats of North
America.
Smithsonian Institute, Washington, 1964. 4to, 242 pp, ill.
- Adney, Edwin T.: The building of a birch canoe.
Outing Vol. 36, New York, 1900. pp 185-189.
- Chatard, Ferdinand E.: An Early Description of Birch-Bark Canoes.
The American Neptune Vol. 8, Salem, 1948. pp 90-98, ill.
About Anders Chydenius' treatise on Americanska Näfwerbåtar.
- Chydenius, Anders: Americanska Näfwerbåtar Beskrefne Under Pehr Kalms inseende för magistergradens erhållande.
Stockholm, 1753. 8vo, (7), 6, (1) pp, 1 pl.
Rediviva, Stockholm, 1971 (facs).
- Clarke, George Frederick: The birch-bark canoe, its influence on
Canada.
The Atlantic Advocate, 1, No. 1, Fredericton, New Brunswick, 1960;
pp 92-96, ill.
- Clay, R.A.: The Quechua Indian's canoe.
Yachting Monthly, xv,1913. pp 335.
- Coulton, Richard L.: Preserved Aboriginal Canoes in Western Canada.
The Mariner's Mirror Vol. 63,London,1977. pp 248-252, ill.
- Dunphy, W.P.: The Bark Canoes of North America.
The Mariner's Mirror Vol. 65,London,1979. pp 77-82, ill.
- Durham, G.W.: Canoes and kayaks of Western America.
Copper Canoe Press, Seattle, 1960.
- Edwards, Clinton R.: Aboriginal Watercraft on the Pacific Coast of South America.
University of California Press, 1965.
- Fenton, William N. & Dodge, Ernest Stanley: An Elm Bark Canoe in the
Peabody Museum of Salem.
The American Neptune Vol. 9, Salem, 1949. pp 185-206 pp, ill., 2 pl.
- Fichter, George S.: How to build an Indian canoe.
D. McKay, New York, c1977.
- Gidmark, David: The Algonquin birchbark canoe.
Shire, Aylesbury, 1988. 8vo, 64 pp, ill.
- Gidmark, David: Birchbark canoe. The story of an apprenticeship with the Indians.
General Store Pub. House, Burnstown, Ont., c1989. 8vo, 160 pp, ill.
- Gidmark, David & Alsford, Denis: Building a birchbark canoe. The Algonquin wâbanäki tcîmân.
Stackpole Books, Mechanicsburg, PA, c1994. 4to, ix, 133 pp, ill.
- Greenlees, Stephen: Indian canoe makers.
Beaver, June, 1954. pp 46-49.
- Guy, C.: Le canot d'écorce à Weymontaching.
(1970), 57 pp, 23 plates, ill.
- Guy, C.: The Weymontaching Birchbark Canoe.
(1974), 55 pp, 34 plates, ill.
- Hadclock, Wendell S. & Dodge, Ernest S.: A Canoe from the Penobscot
River.
The American Neptune Vol. 8, Salem, 1948. pp 289-301, ill., 2 pl.
- Hornell, James: African bark canoes.
Man, December, 1935.
- Hornell, James: Genetic relation of the bark canoe to dugouts
and plank-built boats.
Man, 1940. pp 141;
- Hornell, James: Water Transport. Origins and early evolution.
University Press, Cambridge, 1946.
David & Charles, Newton Abbot, 1970 (2nd ed).
- Kent, Timothy J.: Birchbark Canoes of the Fur Trade.
Silver Fox Enterprises, Ossineke, MI, 1997. 2 vols, xi, 343 pp, ill. & v, 326 pp, ill.
- Leechman, Douglas: The Kootenay canoe.
Beaver, 1967. pp 11-15, ill.
- McPhee, John A. & Adney, Tappan: The survival of the bark canoe.
Farrar, Straus, Giroux, New York. 1975. 8vo, 114, [31] pp, ill.
- Mason, Otis T.: Aboriginal American Canoes.
Outing Vol. 44, New York, 1904. pp 695-713.
- Mason, O.T.: Pointed Bark Canoes of the Kutenai and Amur.
Report of the U.S. National Museum, 1899, Washington, 1901.
pp 525-537.
- Nishi-Mura, Shinji: The Kaniwa-Bune or Birch-Bark Canoe.
The Society of Naval Architects, Tokyo, 1931. 4to, 30 pp, ill.,
4 pl, 1 map.
Review: MM 22, 1936, pp 369-372 (H.H. Brindley).
- Parker, John P.: Three canoe types of the Cape Breton Indians.
New Fisherman Vol. 44 No. 10, 1967. pp 14- , ill.
- Ritzenthaler, Robert Eugene: The building of a Chippewa Indian birch-bark canoe.
Bulletin of the Public Museum of the City of Milwaukee, Milwaukee, 1950. 4to, pp [57]-98, ill.
- Rossman, William: Builder of birch bark canoes.
Grand Rapids Herald-Review, Grand Rapids, MN, 1969. 8vo, 22 pp, ill.
- Stephenson, Gerald F.: John Stephenson and the famous Peterborough canoes. (Which took the place of the birch bark craft of the Indians and the dugout of the white settlers).
Peterborough Historical Society, Peterborough, Ont., 1987. 8vo, 20, [2] pp, ill.
- Walden, Bonnie: Preserving a tradition. How to build a birch bark canoe.
Graphic Arts, Eveleth Technical Institute, Eveleth, MN, 1987.
- Waterman, T.T. & Coffin, Geraldine: Types of canoes on Puget Sound.
New York, 1920.
- Waugh, F.W.: Canadian Aboriginal Canoes.
The Canadian Field-Naturalist Vol. 33,1919. pp 23-33.
- Zimmerly, David W.: Qajaq. Kayaks of Siberia and Alaska.
Alaska State Museums, Juneau, AL, 1986. Sq8vo, 96 pp, ill.
Updated 1998-09-15 by Lars Bruzelius.
Sjöhistoriska Samfundet | The Maritime History Virtual Archives |
Bibliography |
Search.
Copyright © 1996 Lars Bruzelius.