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Tamara Thomsen / Wisconsin Historical Society Tamara Thomsen was 24 feet underwater when she spotted it: the decaying end of a dugout canoe, a great white oak carved some 1,200 years ago.
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The canoe, carved from oak and dating back 1,200 years, spurred the launch of the Wisconsin Dugout Canoe Survey Project. Since then, researchers have cataloged 79 dugout canoes, some dating as far ...
Thomsen’s 2021 find spurred the two women to continue their hunt—and take it public. Establishing the Wisconsin Dugout Canoe Survey Project, the pair and helpers have so far documented a full ...
As a Canadian, however, I have to point out that the canoe referred to as a canvas and plywood “cockle” was not a canoe but a kayak — as shown by the contemporary photograph you carried of ...
78/78 Grizzy finds a crystal skull which gives him the power to sow discord within a group.
All products featured on Condé Nast Traveller are independently selected by our editors. However, when you buy something through our retail links, we may earn an affiliate commission. Once on Barbuda, ...