Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.2005, Qupperneq 65

Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.2005, Qupperneq 65
GREAT NORTHERN DIVER (GAVIA IMMER) IN CIRCUMPOLAR FOLK ORNITHOLOGY 63 elogue of 1732, Carl Linnaeus noted from the Kvikkjokk mountains that “diver necks are used for rnaking karpuses” (Linnaeus, 2003: 152). A karpus is a kind of cap or hood protecting the ears and neck. Also the Norwegian bishop J. E. Gunnerus has described, in an article from 1761, how such karpuses were made from the necks of divers (Granlund, 1953: 128-129). It was usually the black-throated diver that supplied the skin. The skin of the great northern diver has been utilized in the Arctic. Richard K. Nel- son (Nelson, 1969: 255) mentions loon- skin parkas among Alaskan Inuits made of this species, made entirely from the neck skin and feathers. They were said to be waterproof and very warm. The skin of the great northern diver and other species has been used until today by the Inuits in North America (Hoyo et al., 1992: 168). Heads of the great northern divers were carried by Eskimos as talismans (Green- oak, 1997: 14) and also used on the bird skin blankets that were exported to Europe from Greenland in the early 20lh century (Freuchen and Salomonsen, 1958: 40). Its skin has actually also been used in Scandinavia. According to Leem, the coastal Sami of Finnmark used the skin of the great northern diver for manufacturing caps (Leem, 1767: 71). From Ranen in Norway, Iver Ancher Heltzen mentions in 1834, that its skin is very thick, and that he has seen it used for covers on chairs. The birds were usually captured in fishing nets (Heltzen, 1981: 97). As to Iceland, ornithologist Bjarni Sæ- mundsson wrote in 1936: “[The great northern diver] is of little economic value; [...] its feathers are hard and the bird itself rare, so trying to collect its eggs wouldn’t give much in one hand, also because of the great distances. Mostly it is killed for taxidermal reasons, in the spring, as many would like to have a specimen of the bird in its breeding plumage” (Sæmundsson, 1936: 671-672). The great northern diver is now regarded as vulnerable in Iceland (Náttúrufræðistofnun íslands, 2005). Other use An interesting feature in this whole story is the fact that the great northern diver seems also to have been caught alive in Green- land in former times and used as a “watch- dog”, i.e. tied with a rope around its legs or neck and put somewhere high up (e.g. on a house-top or roof), “on guard”, so to speak, as it made loud sounds when it saw someone approaching, and thus warned the owner of coming visitors (Frederiksen, 1980: 70; Thisted, 1999: 154-156). Conclusion The great northern diver has played a sig- nificant role in the traditional environmen- tal knowledge of the various people living within its range. Of course its impact has been greater in North America, where the species is common in the boreal and sub arctic areas. It has there been of great importance from economic, symbolic and cognitive aspects. However, its size, loud voice and its behaviour have also attracted the people on the island and coastal socie- ties of the northern Atlantic sea. It has been a well-known bird both in Norse and
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