Pig bone spoon
Description
In 1974 Waikato Museum acquired a selection of items, including this spoon, from Graham Jackson. Jackson was a New Zealand anthropologist who spent time living with and researching the Kopon and the Kalam people of the Lower Kaironk Valley in Papua New Guinea.
Jackson fieldnotes: Kaj = pig; toy = spoon; waj = could refer to both the shoulder and the thigh of a pig; (ha!pan and !awe) no literal meaning known. Kaj ha!pan / kaj waj / kaj toy / !awe. Spoons used for eating, especially when eating food with fruit pandarus sauce. Made by men from pig bone. These seem to be made from the scapula.
See full details
Public comments
Be the first to comment on this object record.