The tools used by these Early Palaeo-Eskimos include harpoons tipped with tiny stone end blades. |
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The cone shell has modified teeth, like small poison-loaded harpoons, which it shoots out if disturbed. |
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They also show evidence that humans used harpoons, floats and lines to catch their prey, which included sperm whales, right whales and humpbacks. |
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While I was there, I was invited aboard a catcher boat, which hunts and harpoons whales. |
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Small worked flint blades known as microliths were perhaps the barbs of spears and harpoons with wooden shafts. |
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With jade-tipped harpoons they stalked and killed 60 ton whales in skincovered kayaks, called bidarkas and umikaks. |
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People have hunted swordfish throughout history using harpoons and conventional fishing lines. |
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The size and speed of blue whales once served to discourage human whalers in the days of sail-powered ships and hand-thrown harpoons. |
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Makah whalers threw harpoons on three occasions, but the harpoons did not attach to a gray whale on any of these attempts. |
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Animal rightists hurled themselves between the harpoons and the whale in an effort to save its life. |
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Bone was used extensively to make wedges, adzes, hammers, spear heads with link shafts, barbed points and harpoons, eyed needles, and jewellery. |
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The station relied heavily on orcas to herd the southern right whales to the harpoons at the ready. |
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Meals consisted of fish caught with bone harpoons and cooked over a small hearth, as well as rations of palm sugar and fruit. |
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Whaling boats will instead be equipped with electronic sensors to record the number of harpoons deployed and the number of whales killed. |
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Elaborate bone tools were used: toggling and fixed harpoons, harpoon foreshafts, projectile points, eyed needles, and many others. |
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As the salmon teemed up the rivers to spawn back where they were born, they were easily harvested with harpoons, nets or traps. |
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In season a mishmash of trypots, harpoons, windlasses and long boats were collected on the beach, ready for a shout from a lookout high on Paritutu. |
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It was employed to create splints for making baskets, skin an animal, fashion snowshoes, harpoons, spears, bowls, and ladles, and make a birchbark canoe. |
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On May 17, 1999, a week into the hunt, the Makah killed a 30-tonne gray whale, striking it with harpoons and then killing it with a gunshot to the back of the head. |
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The book vividly recollects a season spent with Tongans, who through economic necessity, still hunt whales from small boats with hand-held harpoons. |
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For a monarch caterpillar, ingesting milkweed poisons is not a surefire defense against a predatory stinkbug, which harpoons its victims before sucking up the body fluids. |
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And if you're more interested in how arachnids do it with palpal specializations than molluscan harpoons, I've got an article on how spiders mate. |
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The harpoons were necessary because a small body like a comet generates little gravity. |
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Point out that, as the film has shown, whales are hunted and killed by harpoons. |
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The half-palm is dark brown, with the fur flow running toward the wrist, thus improving the grip on harpoons, rifles and dog traces. |
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Cone snails, a large group of predatory snails, defend themselves and kill their prey by firing poison-coated harpoons. |
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Although some turtles are captured incidentally in fine-mesh fishing nets, most are hunted with special nets, harpoons or underwater guns. |
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Parks Canada and the Inuit Heritage Trust produced an educational poster on harpoons which was distributed throughout Nunavut. |
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The St. Lawrence Iroquoians fished all year round using hooks and lines, harpoons and especially nets. |
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Where whalers once hunted with harpoons, whalewatchers now hunt with cameras. |
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With boats, float harpoons, and sinew-backed bows the Thule were more efficient hunters than the Dorset. |
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These deep divers have survived harpoons, fishing lines, or even killer whales. |
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Laurentian Archaic bone work produced eyed needles, unilaterally barbed harpoons, projectile points, awls, and other items. |
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In a few high-value fisheries, traditional methods are still used, for example Atlantic blue-fin tunas are taken in traps in the Mediterranean and east Atlantic, and by harpoons off the coast of North America. |
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Skin samples taken from various whale species including narwhal, beluga and bowhead are taken by aboriginal hunters via nonlethal sample harpoons. |
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These Neo-Eskimos used harpoons attached to floats to hunt from kayaks and umiaks and lived in permanent villages comprising semisubterranean wooden houses. |
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The aircraft can carry a wide array of weapons such as harpoons, torpedoes, depth charges, mines and rockets. |
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In general Inuit hunters used harpoons to catch marine mammals, snares and traps for small land animals such as Arctic hare and fox, and a bow and arrow for larger animals such as caribou and polar bear. |
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Advanced darts and harpoons also appear in this period, along with the fish hook, the oil lamp, rope, and the eyed needle. |
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Armed with wooden harpoons tipped with mussel shell blades, lines made of whale or seal sinew, and floats made of sealskin, these hardy people launched their small dugout canoes in search of passing humpback or gray whales. |
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The whaling craft consists of harpoons, lances, lines, and sealskin buoys, all of their own workmanship. |
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Coming from grasses, and so from most meadow plants, spikelets have the form of microscopic harpoons that embed themselves into the tissues they encounter and create serious lesions. |
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In the absence of the harpoons, they think, the lander's flexible legs managed to absorb most of the impact energy, but not enough to stop the probe bouncing. |
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They used harpoons only, and some of them would catch a seal right away. |
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Many of the region's archaeological sites have produced arrowheads, lances and harpoons, axes, adzes, scrapers, strikers, etc., which attest to this thousand-year-old technology. |
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They manufactured tiny microblades with a consummate skill that is also expressed in their toggle harpoons, projectile points, knives, burins, and scrapers. |
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Ancient whalers used harpoons to spear the bigger animals from boats out at sea. |
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Like several other Northwest Coast Indians, the Nuu-chah-nulth were whale hunters, employing special equipment such as large dugout canoes and harpoons with long lines and sealskin floats. |
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The Thule culture was the first to introduce to Greenland such technological innovations as dog sleds and toggling harpoons. |
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Eventually, seal hunters used harpoons to spear the animals from boats out at sea, and hooks for killing pups on ice or land. |
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The bone harpoons and points have the most distinctive chronological markers within the typological sequence. |
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As the earliest known harpoons, these weapons were made and used 90,000 years ago, most likely to spear catfishes. |
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At first slow whales were caught by men hurling harpoons from small open boats. |
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Electric harpoons will be permitted in the inshore fishery upon request. |
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The harpoons of the banderilleros followed, piercing the back in symmetrical pairs. |
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The hunts use harpoons for dolphin hunts or intentionally drive whales into nets, reporting them as cases of entanglement. |
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Fin whales have been targets of illegal captures using harpoons for dolphin hunts or intentionally drive whales into nets. |
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Modern whalers use explosive harpoons to kill whales by detonating a penthrite grenade within the head or thorax, inducing neurotrauma and death. |
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Tiny microliths were developed for hafting onto harpoons and spears. |
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Silently obeying the order, the three harpooneers now stood with the detached iron part of their harpoons, some three feet long, held, barbs up, before him. |
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Whaling was mentioned in Norwegian written sources as early as the year 800, and hunting minke whales with harpoons was common in the 11th century. |
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Copper harpoons were known to the seafaring Harappans well into antiquity. |
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In the early 19th century the one flue harpoon was introduced, which reduced failed harpoons due to the head cutting its way out of the body of the whale. |
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