User Log On
Fruhead.Com
Talk
PowerWall
Messenger
Forums
User Directory

About
Member Map
What's New?
Fruvous Dot Com
FHDC FAQ

Welcome, guest!
Create an account for a personalized experience,
or log on if you have one.

Mystery object -- what is it?

   Discussion: Mystery object -- what is it?
stealthlori · 21 years, 1 month ago

We (Gordon and I) don't know either.

These photos show an item used on the Lewis & Clark expedition. The object is about 3 feet long and is made entirely of wood. Despite being in a museum display case, it was accompanied by no placard or other identifying remarks.

Disclaimer: no bears, smiling or otherwise, were harmed in the photographing of this object.

Bruce Rose Back · 21 years, 1 month ago

Does anyone remember an old game show called the Liar's club?� It featured a panel of celebrities who were handed an object.� The object was passed from one to the next and each gave their own plausible descriptions of the object and its function.� The contestants then chose which of the four descriptions was the correct one.� I don't remember the final round... but the show was hilarious, especially when Richard Dawson was on the panel. :-)

My first thought was that it was some type of auger.� But after the second photo, the angle doesn't look quite right... and it's made of wood.� Wooden augers don't make sense.

I suppose that means that my answer is no.� But now I'm curious.

stealthlori Back · 21 years, 1 month ago

My first thought was that it was some type of auger. But after the second photo, the angle doesn�t look quite right... and it�s made of wood. Wooden augers don�t make sense.

Precisely.�

It was in a case with a peace pipe, a bottle of smoking herbs -- which go with the pipe --� and a Jefferson honorary medallion.� It was the only unidentified object in the case.�

Much -- but not all -- of the focus of the exhibit was�medical situations and remedies on the trail.�� In that area there's no clear tie-in�for any of the other objects in the case, so I don't think it's likely to be a doctor's tool either.

Jºnªthªn Back · 21 years, 1 month ago
I used to love that show. Dick Gautier, what a guy.
Wintress Back · 21 years, 1 month ago
Reminds me of part of some student intelligence competition thing: I think it was Academic Decathlon, where you were handed a piece of something and you had to collectively determine a use for it.� One year, it was a piece from an electric dishwasher.� Weird.
Jºnªthªn Back · 21 years, 1 month ago
Looks like an auger to me. Note the hole in the flat piece on the left side for a handle.
Alan Mendelsohn Back · 21 years, 1 month ago
I vote for auger.
Michael (foof) Maki Back · 21 years, 1 month ago
It looks to me like a pipe stem. Having travelled in Indian circles quite a bit, I've seen a few pipes which looked approximately like this...except they generally had a pipestone bowl that plugged in to where the flat end is on this one.

You didn't ask a docent while you were there?
Gordondon son of Ethelred Back · 21 years, 1 month ago
There weren't any docents or anyone else to ask. Our other theory was far my interesting anyway.
stealthlori Back · 21 years, 1 month ago

Actually, that's the thought that occured to me this morning, since the "peace pipe" was displayed below it.� The "peace pipe" was made of clay (or something�that color�--� could be pipestone), about�8 inches long,�and I think it may actually have been the bowl part of the pipe with a short stem, which could have been inserted in that flat-end�hole to make a really dramatic ceremonial piece.�

We couldn't get a clear look at the�ends of the mystery thing to figure out whether it had a smoke-drawing hole running the length of the corkscrewy part or not.

And no, there were no docents.� And for that matter no guards to point out that no, we weren't allowed to take pictures.� Neither of us saw the little sign that said we couldn't ... until we were leaving the museum.� *chagrin*

I didn't put up the full picture we took for size reasons, but later today I'll crop the "peace pipe" part and you can see if it looks like they go together.�

stealthlori Back · 21 years, 1 month ago

Okay, here's a bigger picture of all the contents of the case, including the "peace pipe" (which might just be the bowl), @8" wide; the "bottle of smoking herbs", @ 6 inches high, and the Jefferson medallion, which was maybe 3-4 inches across.

Now that mystery object #1 may be identified as part of a peace pipe, I'm wondering how the Jefferson medallion fits in. Maybe it was a gift to tribal leaders they encountered on the expedition, as an offering of friendship.
dave "buh" · 21 years, 1 month ago
of some kind. I think there's a piece missing, a bar you'd slip through the hole in the handle and use to turn it. I'm not sure exactly what you'd use it to drill for, though.
iPauley Back · 21 years, 1 month ago
*random guess*

Ice, perhaps? for ice fishing?

-- Pauley
Joe Navratil Back · 21 years, 1 month ago
I'd have to agree that it's an auger -- made out of wood because it's lighter, perhaps (though iirc they took literally *tons* of supplies with them, so what's a few pounds on a drill?); warped due to poor handling in the last couple hundred years?

If it's for ice fishing, that could explain the pointy other end -- chip out a start with one end, flip it around and start drilling?
Laura P. · 21 years, 1 month ago
It may be something usually made out of metal, but they made it out of wood (even though it would be less effective) in the interest of lightness. Also, if they dropped it in the water it would float, not sink like a metal whatever-the-hell-it-is, which kind of supports the ice auger theory.
Starfox · 21 years, 1 month ago
It's a primitive form of an anal probe! Just ask Cartman!
stealthlori Back · 21 years, 1 month ago
hahaha!� pretty much what we thought.�
Julie · 21 years, 1 month ago
I can't remember the name but isn't it a thing to get water out of the ground?
Jºnªthªn Back · 21 years, 1 month ago
You're thinking of an Archimedes screw, which is a corkscrew shaped device inside a tube. This ain't it.
elfy, teacher of many · 21 years, 1 month ago

I can almost hear Lister and Rimmer trying to explain to Cat what a Stasis Leak is.

"Oh you mean a magic doorway?� why didn't you say so?"

Samantha · 21 years, 1 month ago
looks to me like just one giant swizzle-stick.
Gordondon son of Ethelred · 21 years, 1 month ago
I can't believe that nobody has come up with our solution. Lori and I decided it was a sex toy. Of course we had just been looking at hobbity pics of Lewis and Clark and felt that would appreciate it.
stealthlori Back · 21 years, 1 month ago

ssshhhh!

aw, man, now they'll know we're preeverts.

and they didn't know that before.� um.�

Kris 'engaged' Bedient Back · 21 years, 1 month ago
But sex toy was so obvious no one felt they had to specify it
Yvonne Back · 21 years, 1 month ago
Gah!� It looks more like a drill bit than a sex toy...wouldn't that hurt?� :P
Gordondon son of Ethelred Back · 21 years, 1 month ago
I hate to say this but you were the one we were sure was going to say "Sex Toy."
Andrea Krause Back · 21 years, 1 month ago
OH the credibility train on THAT statement left the station long ago, pr0nmonger. :)
Nikki · 21 years, 1 month ago
It's definetly some sort of auger - albeit made of wood - for drawing water, planting seeds? or breaking a hole in the ice. No matter how strange it seems because of the material the corkscrew end is definetly an auger. :)

You must first create an account to post.



©1999-2024 · Acceptable Use
Website for Creative Commons Music?