Fruit pandanus axe
Maker
Unknown Maker
Description
In 1974 Waikato Museum acquired a selection of items, including this axe, 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: The biggest was hafted to sell to me, the other two were in use. They are used in conjunction with bone knives to remove the pith from fruit pandanus before cooking. Other uses are unknown. Stone 'adze' hafted to a small wooden handle with split rattan vine. Manufactured and used only by men.
Wooden handle with a wooden head on one side and an opening for a stone head on the other, bound by natural fibre lashing. Stone head is triangular in shape and is detached.
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Object detail
Part 2 - 95 x 65 x 20 - LxWxD
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