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Start Over You searched for: Collection place Klamath River, Humboldt County, California Remove constraint Collection place: Klamath River, Humboldt County, California Culture or time period American cultures Remove constraint Culture or time period: American cultures Loans S1996-1997 #3: Great Valley Museum of Natural History (September 4, 1996–December 17, 1996) Remove constraint Loans: S1996-1997 #3: Great Valley Museum of Natural History (September 4, 1996–December 17, 1996)

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Hearst Museum object titled Foreshaft, accession number 1-1143, described as Elkhorn arrow foreshaft.
Hearst Museum object titled Foreshaft, accession number 1-1142, described as Elkhorn arrow foreshaft.
Hearst Museum object titled Foreshaft, accession number 1-1144, described as Elkhorn arrow foreshaft.
Hearst Museum object titled Harpoon point, accession number 1-1141, described as Made from elk antler.  Double row of tanged points on each side, slot carved into proximal end.
Hearst Museum object titled Head scratcher, accession number 1-9532, described as Bone, flat; incised dentate and geometric pattern design; hole drilled in one hand for carrying handle.
Hearst Museum object titled Louse killer, accession number 1-1161, described as Bone, elongated section of bone, rounded at each end; hole drilled in narrow end; section of bone with hole broken off; geometric incisions on convex side; row of shallow dots on concave side.
Hearst Museum object titled Maul, accession number 1-1195, described as Stone, conical, mushroom shaped at proximal end.  Flat distal end is chipped.
Hearst Museum object titled Mesh measure, accession number 1-1325, described as Elk antler, rectangular, constricted center; 6 incised dots each end, each side; 4 dots in diamond pattern at center, both sides.
Hearst Museum object titled Money purse, accession number 1-9482, described as Deer antler, curved, hollow; rectangular longitudinal slot at center; raised flange at each end; with transverse grooves; incised zigzag lines principal motif.
Hearst Museum object titled Money purse, accession number 1-1151, described as Deer or elk antler fork, hollow; ends of both forks sealed with pitch; string handle threaded through holes in rim of central branch; right angle and isosceles triangles incised in 2 transverse rows; pigment rubbed into grooves.