-
Watap, watape, wattap, or
wadab (/
wəˈtɑːp/ or /wæˈtɑːp/) is the
thread and
cordage used by the
Native Americans and
First Nations peoples of
Canada to...
- Lake
North Lake
South Lake Rat Lake Rose Lake
Arrow River Rove Lake
Watap Lake
Watap Portage Mountain Lake
Pigeon River Moose Lake Fowl Lake
Pigeon River...
- made of
white cedar, and the hull, ribs, and
thwarts were
fastened using watap, a
binding usually made from the
roots of
various species of conifers, such...
-
Anishinaabe language, is a box made of
panels of
birchbark sewn
together with
watap. The
construction of
makakoon from
birchbark was an
essential element in...
- Lake"
Lesser Cherry Portage 0.13 31.29
Mountain Lake 7.81 39.10
Watap Portage 0.30 39.40
Watap Lake 3.70 43.10
western part now
known as "Rove Lake" Great...
-
significant part of the land border; the
remainder is
along two
other portages,
Watap Portage (100 rods or 0.31
miles or 500 metres) a
short distance to its east...
- once
commonly found along its banks. The name
Watab comes from the word
watap, as the
cordage used for
sewing together the birch-bark
panels on the Ojibwe...
-
plain 75 feet
above the river.
There was a good
supply of
birchbark and
watap for canoe-building but few
large trees for construction. Archaeological...
-
water in the Rove Formation,
drains the
nearby Duncan Lake,
South Lake, and
Watap Lake. It
empties into the
Arrow River, a
tributary of the
Pigeon River,...
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Formation lakes (going east to west):
South Fowl,
North Fowl, Moose, Mountain,
Watap, Rose, South,
Little North and Gunflint. The
border runs
approximately through...