Lot 186, Auction 4/26/2024: 5 Prehistoric Mogollon Reed Arrow Shafts
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Lot 186, Auction 4/26/2024: 5 Prehistoric Mogollon Reed Arrow Shafts

$637.50

In stock

Native American, Southwestern United States, Arizona / New Mexico region, Mogollon / Ancestral Puebloan culture, Pre-Colonization, ca. 1000 to 1400 CE. A rare collection of 5 ancient arrow shafts made from reeds with wood tips and the remains of sinew / vegetal fibers for securing the wood tips and the feather fletching on the longest arrow. The smallest shaft, while it appears incomplete, has a notch for nocking and half its length is made up of the wood tip. Throughout North American the versatile common cane reed (Phragmites) that often grow along rivers banks served as a staple resource for arrows – tribes such as Apache, Cahuilla, Havasupai, Kawaiisu, Navajo, Northern Paiute, and Tewa are all known to use reed shafts. The common cane is lightweight yet sturdy, and tips / foreshafts of mesquite wood were often inserted into the cane, ensuring precision and strength when hunting small game. Size of longest: 32.5″ L x 0.3″ W (82.6 cm x 0.8 cm)

Native American / STOP act: Please note this item falls under the Safeguard Tribal Objects of Patrimony Act and is not eligible for international shipping. Native American, Alaska Native, & Native Hawaiian objects are only eligible to ship within the United States.

Condition: 4 long shafts with losses to wooden tips and missing fletching feathers. The longest shaft has remains of feathers and the wood tip is intact.

Provenance: private Reinsmoen collection, Clear Lake, Iowa, USA, acquired through descent from Robert Anderson, acquired prior to 2000

All items legal to buy/sell under U.S. Statute covering cultural patrimony Code 2600, CHAPTER 14, and are guaranteed to be as described or your money back.

A Certificate of Authenticity will accompany all purchases.

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