Interpreting the Ojibwe Pictographs of North Hegman Lake MN - 6

Soar Home with the wisdom of real dream-catchers
Dream-Catchers Home
Dream-Catchers History
Dream-Catchers Gallery

Weaving a Dream-Catcher
Order Dream-Catchers
Mother Earth Drum
Seventh Fire Prophecy-Protest-Principle
History of the Little Shell Band of Ojibwe
History of the Ojibways
The Kokopelli Project
Ojibwe Culture and Language
Native American Holocaust
Native American Medicine
Native News of the Seventh Fire
Natural Serotonin
Pycnogenol

Photo Galleries Index
The Littlest Acorn
Stories Dream-Catchers Weave
Creating Turtle Island
Sage Ceremony for Dream-Catchers
Larry Cloud-Morgan
White Eagle Soaring
Seventh Fire Blog
Real Dream Catchers' links
Comments about these Dream-Catchers

Dolphin Dream Dream-Catchers of the Seventh Fire DreamCatcher Heritage Collection

Dream-after-Dream Dream-Catchers of the Seventh Fire DreamCatcher Heritage Collection

Twin Flame Dream-Catchers of the Seventh Fire DreamCatcher Heritage Collection

Dream-Catchers teach spirit wisdoms of the Seventh Fire

Dream-Catchers teach the wisdoms of the Seventh Fire, an Ojibwe Prophecy, that is being fulfilled at this moment. The Light-skinned Race is being shown the result of the Way of the Mind and the possibilities that reside in the Path of the Spirit. Real Dream-Catchers point the way.

Digg, Reddit, Propellor, Stumble and more

Indian Tribes and Termination

Ojibwe Encampment on the Winnipeg River by Paul Kane

Ojibwe Art and Dance

Interpreting the Ojibwe Pictographs of North Hegman Lake, MN

Ojibwe Forestry and Resource Management

Ojibwe Homes

Ojibwe Honor Creation, the Elders and Future Generations

Ojibwe Indian Reservations and Trust Land

Ojibwe Language

Introduction to Ojibwe Language

Introduction to Ojibwe Noun and Pronoun Grammar

Introduction to Ojibwe Numbers
and Money

Introduction to Ojibwe Verbs
and Preverbs

Introduction to Ojibwe
Verb Grammar

Introduction to Ojibwe Command and Question Grammar

FREELANG OJIBWE DICTIONARY - free downloadable Ojibwe-English & English-Ojibwe dictionary form Freelang.net.

Ojibwe Snowshoes and the Fur Trade

Ojibwe Sovereignty and the Casinos

Ojibwe Spirituality and Kinship

The Question of Quantum - 2 - 3 - 4

Family, Community, and School Impacts on American Indian and Alaska Native Students' Success

Tracing the Path of Violence: The Boarding School Experience

Quantum Physics Leads Science Back to the Sacred Fire

Cultural Differences Can Lead to Misunderstanding

Ojibwe Tobacco and Pipes

Traditional Ojibwe Entertainment

The Wallum Olum: a Pictographic History of the Lenni Lenape, Root Tribe from which the Ojibwe arose

A Migration Legend of the Delaware Tribe 

Wallum Olum: The Deluge - Part II

Winter Count: History Seen from a Native American Tradition - 2 - 3

Ojibwe Creation Story

Paleo-American Origins

Soul of the Indian: Foreword

The Great Mystery - 2
The Family Altar - 2
Ceremonial and Symbolic Worship - 2
Barbarism and the Moral Code - 2
The Unwritten Scriptures - 2

On the Borderland of Spirits - 2

Charles Alexander Eastman

Pycnogenol is a super-antioxidant sourced through Native American medicineMaritime Pine Pycnogenol  is the super-antioxidant that has been tried and tested by over 30 years of research for many acute and chronic disorders. The Ojibwe knew about it almost 500 years ago.  Didn't call it that, though. White man took credit.

Seroctin--the natural serotonin enhancer to reduce  stress and depression, and  enjoy better sleep

Plant Magic is Organic Gardening Nature's Way

Accelerated Mortgage Pay-off can help you own your home in half to one third the time and save many thousands of dollars.

Photo Gallery

Traditional Life of the Ojibwe Aurora Village Yellowknife
The Making of a Man
Little Dancer in the Circle

Friends in the Circle
Grass Dancer
Shawl Dancers
Jingle Dress Dancers

Fancy Shawl Dancer
Men Traditional Dancers
Powwow: The Good Red Road

Crater Lake Photo Gallery
Crater Lake Landscape

Flowers of Crater Lake
Birds & Animals of Crater Lake
Gold Mantled Ground Squirrel
The Rogue River

Sacred Fire of the Modoc
Harris Beach Brookings Oregon

Listen to
American Indian Radio
while you surf 

Willow animal effigies by Bill Ott after relics found in the Southwest Archaic CultureMuseum-quality willow animal effigies of the Southwest Archaic culture, art from a 4,000 year-old tradition by Bill Ott

Unique Cherokee Dream-Catcher from basket-weavers' numerology by Catherine Sundvall

Origins of Violence - 2

Recognizing a Native American Holocaust

Prologue  
Before Columbus

Pestilence and Genocide

Sex, Race and Holy War
Epilogue

The Native American Discovery of Europe before Columbus

Examining the Reputation of
Christopher Columbus

Christopher Columbus, Marrano and Mariner

Christopher Columbus Jewish and New Christian Elements

Christopher Columbus and the Indians

Columbus My Enemy

Columbus exposed as iron-fisted tyrant who tortured his slaves

Columbus Day -The white man’s myth and the Redman's Holocaust

Excerpt from The Destruction of the Indies by Las Casas

How Lincoln's Army 'Liberated' the Indians

Lincoln Targeting Civilians Is a War Crime

Massacre at Sand Creek

Wounded Knee Hearing Testimony

An Ojibwe Trail of Tears

Wisconsin Trail of Tears

Canadian Genocide of Indian Children by Church and State - 2 - 3

Canadian Prime Minister Harper Apologizes for Residential School Abuse

Massacre at Sand Creek

Wounded Knee Hearing Testimony

An Ojibwe Trail of Tears

Wisconsin Trail of Tears

Winter Count: History Seen from a Native American Tradition - 2 - 3

Tracing the Path of Violence: The Boarding School Experience

The Story of the Opposition on the Road to Extinction: Protest Camp in Minneapolis

Poverty and Despair: The Failed Policies & Human Rights Violations directed against Native Americans

Larry Cloud-Morgan
Activist, Teacher, Friend 

Larry Cloud-Morgan
and the Silo Pruning Hooks

Larry Cloud-Morgan: Speaking Truth to Power 

Larry Cloud-Morgan:
Testimonies to a Great Soul 

Mendota Sacred Sites - Affidavit of Larry Cloud-Morgan

Who Deems What Is Sacred?

Cloud-Morgan, Catholic activist, buried with his peace pipe  

The Relationship of Wolves to the Wintermaker

According to Schoolcraft, the Dakota had a very similar God of the North to the Ojibwe Wintermaker called Wa-ze-at-ta We-chas-tah. Wolves are "the soldiers of the northern god, who fight his battles" (Schoolcraft 1851:vol.4:496). In the drawing of the Dakota spirit he is depicted with outstretched arms bent legs and a horned headdress. A wolf is drawn to the left of the pictographic figure.

The Association of Pictography with Ojibwe Medicine Men and Women

As Schoolcraft keenly observed:" The idea and the picture representing the idea are too intimately connected to allow the one to be well understood without a knowledge of the other" (Schoolcraft 1851:412). The Meda (or medical magicians) and the

Oracles or Prophets called Jossakeeds . . . are the leading influences in war and hunting . . . They furnish objects of remembrance upon graves, they animate the arcana of the mystical societies, and they constitute no small part of the pictorial matter recorded on trees, on rolls of birch bark and skins, and even on the hard surface of rocks. Whenever a sheet of Indian figures, or a piece of their symbolic writings is presented for examination, it is important to decide, as a primary point, upon its theological or mythological characteristics; for these are generally the key to its interpretation (Schoolcraft 1851:413).

Although artist George Catlin often unfortunately did not identify which specific tribe he was describing, he wrote during the first half of the nineteenth century that the dog feast was a "religious" event and dog images were carved into rocks as a symbol of fidelity (Catlin 1844:230). Dogs were also offerings to the underground spirit that caused illness and were sometimes drowned in lakes with tobacco as an offering (Copway 1851).

Pictography as a mnemonic device

In Ojibwe Pictography pictographs were often mnemonic devices and sometimes there were songs associated with the signs. Rock art is a subclass of pictography which was apparently quite widely used within the landscape. Messages were chalked on rocks. Images were carved into trees. Birch bark messages were left for others. Maps were made. Birch bark scrolls were used in Midewiwin ceremonies.

The imagery at Hegman Lake may be a simple memory device and a way to remember the meridian constellations used for navigation.

Some pictographs had regular and well understood meanings e.g., clan symbols.

In Ojibwe the subclass of pictography on rock was called "muzzinabikon" and usually recorded clan symbols and the dreams and visions of medicine men and women.

As with other areas of archaeology there is differential preservation of rock art. Chalked pictographs and carvings on soft sandstone or trees tend not to be preserved. The accounts that indicated that the caves all along the Mississippi River were covered with petroglyphs have for the most part eroded away over time or been destroyed by road construction and the railroads.

Conclusions

The research model described here suggests that the Hegman Lake panel represents the Ojibwe meridian constellations visible during the early evening in winter. These were useful for navigating in the deep woods during hunting season. The arrangement of figures at the site appears to have been carefully composed by one rock artist.

In the future it may be useful to photograph the panel using infrared film and a red and two neutral density filters since Loendorf (1999) suggests that infrared photography can sometimes surprisingly "see through" red ochre and produce an image of what is underneath it. This could generate stratigraphic information if there is an earlier pictograph with a different set of pigments or impurities in a binder. Sturgeon cartilage was sometimes rendered as a binder.

It also might be useful to photograph the panel under high magnification to attempt to resolve if natural processes have encapsulated the red ochre paint. To the naked eye its present relatively unweathered and excellent condition appears to mean either that it may not be especially old or it may be a site where an older pictograph could have been repainted.

The inclusion of elements from widely known Ojibwe legends, and references to constellations with cosmological or religious significance, make it an intriguing scene. Its location and artistic value have made it popular with visitors to the north woods.

References

Benton-Banai, E. 1988 The Mishomis Book: The Voice of the Ojibway. Indian Country Communications, Inc., Hayward, Wisconsin.

Blair, E. H. 1996 The Indian Tribes of the Upper Mississippi Valley & Region of the Great Lakes. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, Nebraska.

Burke, P. 2001 Eyewitnessing:The Uses of Images as Historical Evidence. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, NY.

Catlin, G. 1973 Letters and Notes on the Manners, Customs, and Conditions of North American Indians. 2 vols. Dover Publications, Inc., New York, Reprint 1844.

Clottes, J. 2001 Paleolithic Europe. In The Handbook of Rock Art Research, edited by D. S. Whitley, pp. 459-481. Alta Mira Press, Walnut Creek, California.

Conway, T., 1993 Painted Dreams: Native American Rock Art. North Wood Press, Inc., Minocqua, Wisconsin.

Dewdney, S. a. K. E. K. 1973 Indian Rock Paintings of the Great Lakes. 2nd ed. University of Toronto Press, Toronto.

Drury, M. 2002 Always Hunt a Rising Moon. In Outdoor Life.

Furtman, M. 2000 Magic on the Rocks: Canoe Country Pictographs.

Gawboy, C. 1992 Ely Pictographs Linked to the Heavens. In Duluth News-Tribune, Duluth.

Grant, C. 1983 The rock art of the North American Indians. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Hallowell, A. I. 1992 The Ojibwa of Berens River, Manitoba: Ethnography into History. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich College Publishers, Fort Worth, Texas.

Hilger, M. I. 1992 Chippewa child life and its cultural background. Minnesota Historical Society Press, St. Paul.

Kegg, M. 1993 Portage Lake: Memories of an Ojibwe Language. University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis.

Kohl, J. G. 1985 Kitchi-Gami: Life Among the Lake Superior Ojibway. Minnesota Historical Society press, St. Paul.

Loendorf, L. 2001 Rock Art Recording. In The Handbook of Rock Art Research, edited by D. S. Whitley, pp. 55-79. AltaMira Press, Walnut Creek, California.

Mason, P. P. (editor)1997 Schoolcraft's Ojibwa Lodge Stories. Michigan State University Press, East Lansing.

Price, M. W. 2002 Anishinaabe Star Knowledge, http://www.winds.uthscsa.edu/2002/summer/knowledge.html.

Rajnovich, G., 1994 Reading Rock Art: Interpreting The Indian Rock Paintings Of The Canadian Shield. Natural Heritage/Natural History Inc., Toronto.

Reagan, A. B., 1958 Picture Island. Minnesota Archaeologist .

Schoolcraft, H. R., 1851 Historical and Statistical Information . . . of the Indian tribes of the Untied States.

Skinner, A., 1911 Notes on the Eastern Cree and Northern Saulteaux, pp. 1-178. vol. IX. American Museum of Natural History, New York.

Wellman, K., 1979 A Survey of North American Indian Rock Art. Akademische Druck und Verlagsanfalt, Graz, Austria.

1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 - 6

White Eagle Soaring: Dream Dancer of the 7th Fire

 

Index of DreamCatchers However You Spell DreamCatcher

all nations dream catcher

angel dream catcher

aspiration dream catcher

bodymindspirit dream catcher

bud of the rose dream catcher

butterfly dream catcher

dolphin dreams dream catcher

dreamafterdream dream catcher

dream star dream catcher

dream within a dream dream catcher

four directions dream catcher

grandfathersun dream catcher

heartdreams dream catcher

imagine dream catcher

many dreams dream catcher

marriage dream catcher

natural freedom dream catcher

path of spirit dream catcher

pentacle dream catcher

power of the circle dream catcher

red eagle of dawn dream catcher

rolling thunder dream catcher

soaring dream catcher

spider web dream catcher

sun-moon dream catcher

sunset-sunrise dream catcher

twin flame dream catcher

all nations dreamcatchers

angel dreamcatchers

aspiration dreamcatchers

bodymindspirit dreamcatchers

bud of the rose dreamcatchers

butterfly dreamcatchers

dolphin dreams dreamcatchers

dreamafterdream dreamcatchers

dream star dreamcatchers

dream within a dream dreamcatchers

four directions dreamcatchers

grandfathersun dreamcatchers

heartdreams dreamcatchers

imagine dreamcatchers

many dreams dreamcatchers

marriage dreamcatchers

natural freedom dreamcatchers

path of spirit dreamcatchers

pentacle dreamcatchers

power of the circle dreamcatchers

red eagle of dawn dreamcatchers

rolling thunder dreamcatchers

soaring dreamcatchers

spider web dreamcatchers

sun-moon dreamcatchers

sunset-sunrise dreamcatchers

twin flame dreamcatchers

all nations dreamcatchers

angel dreamcatchers

aspiration dreamcatchers

bodymindspirit dreamcatchers

bud of the rose dreamcatchers

butterfly dreamcatchers

dolphin dreams dreamcatchers

dreamafterdream dreamcatcher

dream star dreamcatcher

dream within a dream dreamcatcher

four directions dreamcatcher

grandfathersun dreamcatcher

heartdreams dreamcatcher

imagine dreamcatcher

many dreams dreamcatcher

marriage dreamcatcher

natural freedom dreamcatcher

path of spirit dreamcatcher

pentacle dreamcatcher

power of the circle dreamcatcher

red eagle of dawn dreamcatcher

rolling thunder dreamcatcher

soaring dreamcatcher

spider web dreamcatcher

sun-moon dreamcatcher

sunset-sunrise dreamcatcher

twin flame dreamcatcher

However you've spelled Dream Catcher, these REAL Dream Catchers are natural magic from Creator Direct (Manidoog).

American Gold and Silver Currency is Back. Click here for the Liberty Dollar at a Discount.


Dream Catchers' links

This is a crazy world. What can be done? Amazingly, we have been mislead. We have been taught that we can control government by voting. The founder of the Rothschild dynasty, Mayer Amschel Bauer, told the secret of controlling the government of a nation over 200 years ago. He said, "Permit me to issue and control the money of a nation and I care not who makes its laws." Get the picture? Your freedom hinges first on the nation's banks and money system. That's why we advocate using the Liberty Dollar, to understand the monetary and banking system. Freedom is connected with Debt Elimination for each individual. Not only does this end personal debt, it places the people first in line as creditors to the National Debt ahead of the banks. They don't wish for you to know this. It has to do with recognizing WHO you really are in A New Beginning: A Practical Course in Miracles. You CAN take back your power and stop volunteering to pay taxes to the collection agency for the BEAST. You can take back that which is yours, always has been yours and use it to pay off your debts. And you can send others to these pages to discover what you are discovering.

Get a course to promote your business online, explode your sales

Get software to promote your business online in less time

Get software to streamline your business and run it hands free.

Dream Catchers Art and Culture of the Seventh Fire

Dream-Catchers are wisdom-teachers. If you learn to listen, they will take YOU on a journey of wonder and revelations, too. Illusions are stripped away and new ways are revealed.  The real Dream-Catchers of the Seventh Fire are waiting for you. Come into the realm of Real Dream-Catchers.  See with eyes of spirit, listen with your heart and soar with the White Eagle.

Disclaimer: The statements on www.real-dream-catchers.com  have not been evaluated by the FDA. These dream catchers are not intended to diagnose nor treat nor cure any disease or illness. Neither are dreamcatchers, the dream catcher, nor any dreamcatcher.

In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.

© 2007, Allen Aslan Heart / White Eagle Soaring of the Little Shell Pembina Band, a Treaty Tribe of the Ojibwe Nation