^ also that cedar tree is the size of a small apartment building and it also has a massive boulder for sinking ships tied to a cedar rope sitting waiting to be thrown and retrieved. To keep it topical they even mounted guns on their war canoes once they sank a few American ships.
NW coast First Nations not only had art; the Haida built intense fortifications. Tlingits wore full suits of armour. Further south groups made "villages" with massive long houses with beautiful doorways in the shape of orcas that opened and closed their mouths with levers*.
Between the wood working, stone work that looks like it was done on lathes and intensive ecosystem modification throughout the coast I think we can drop the primitive stuff. I know Gatehouse put those quotation marks there for a reason though.
*
I know it's off topic but here is an example of the "portal" doorway, you enter through the orca's mouth. Forces you to duck, so when raiders from the north come you can stand and face them one at a time.
NW coast First Nations not only had art; the Haida built intense fortifications. Tlingits wore full suits of armour. Further south groups made "villages" with massive long houses with beautiful doorways in the shape of orcas that opened and closed their mouths with levers*.
Between the wood working, stone work that looks like it was done on lathes and intensive ecosystem modification throughout the coast I think we can drop the primitive stuff. I know Gatehouse put those quotation marks there for a reason though.
*
I know it's off topic but here is an example of the "portal" doorway, you enter through the orca's mouth. Forces you to duck, so when raiders from the north come you can stand and face them one at a time.
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