Octopus Hook Sinker
97-120-397
From: United States of America | Hawaiian Islands | Kauai
Curatorial Section: Oceanian
| Object Number | 97-120-397 |
| Current Location | Collections Storage |
| Culture | Hawaiian |
| Provenience | United States of America | Hawaiian Islands | Kauai |
| Culture Area | Oceania | Polynesia |
| Section | Oceanian |
| Materials | Olivine | Stone |
| Description | An oval squid or octopus sinker (pōhaku lūhe‘e) made of olivine. The sinker has a flat base and a rounded top. Stone sinkers were essential implements used with nets, fishing lines, and lures to control depth, stability, and movement when fishing. There is a wide variety of forms, including grooved, perforated, bread-loaf, and plummet types. Grooved sinkers are the most common; they typically have longitudinal or transverse grooves for lashing to lines or nets. Bread-loaf forms were commonly associated with dip nets for uhu (parrotfish), and plummet sinkers (pōhaku ʻalōʻa) were designed for deep-sea fishing with a constricted neck for line attachment.
In squid (heʻe) fishing, stone sinkers (pōhaku lūheʻe ) formed part of composite lures incorporating cowrie shells, wooden stems, hooks, cords, and ti leaves, where the carefully selected stone provided balance and motion to enhance visual attraction. |
| Length | 8.2 cm |
| Width | 5.8 cm |
| Thickness | 4 cm |
| Credit Line | Gift of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 1997 |
| Other Number | L-120-397 - Old Museum Number | 3272 - ANSP Number |
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