Centuries before the invention of the train and the motorboat, canoes were used 
for exploration, trade, war, and the hunt. Indians crafted canoes out of dugout 
logs, birch bark, and animal hides; French colonists employed courier canoes; 
and the Spanish explorers brought cane and wood crafts with them to new lands. 
The canoe has brought together Native Americans and European colonists, promoted 
exploration, and changed the economy forever with the onset of the fur trade. 
Hundreds of years later, it continues to hold practical, ceremonial, and totemic 
significance for many North Americans.
Key Porter Books April 2000, 2002 
Non-fiction 143 pages 
ISBN-10 155263310
The Reviews
Toronto Star: "an aesthetic jewel"...          
Hamilton Spectator: "a study of the canoe's pivotal but 
under-recognized role in the history of the continent." 
 

 
 
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