Betula papyrifera -Marshall-
canoe birch, paper birch


Entry Type: Species

Species Name: Betula papyrifera -Marshall-

Common Name: canoe birch, paper birch

Myaamia Name: wiikweehsimiši

Description:

Harvest Seasons: Summer

Harvest Comments:

Habitats: Beech-Maple Forest, Oak Forest including Oak-Hickory, Beech-Oak-Maple Mixed Mesophytic

Uses: Material, Technology

Locations: Undetermined

Sources

Kenton, E. 1925

Reference Type: Related Info

Archival Data:

The Illinois village visited by Marquette in 1674 [situated just north of St. Louis, where the Mississinewa River enters the Wisconsin River] did not make their canoes from birch bark. "We take leave of our Illinois at the end of June, about three o'clock in the afternoon. We embark in the sight of all the people, who admire our little ["bark canoes" from Kenton 1925:336, in a list of equipment at the beginning of the trip], for they have never seen any like them".

Comments: N/A


Masthay, C. 2002

Reference Type: Use - Technology

Archival Data:

Canoes are made from birch bark.

Comments: N/A


Kellogg, L.P. 1923

Reference Type: Use - Technology

Archival Data:

Canoes are seldom made from birch bark. "A pirogue . . . This is a long sort of boat made of the trunk of a single tree. Canoes of bark are seldom made use of in these parts [northern Illinois around Fox River]".

Comments: N/A


Gatschet, A.S. ca. 1895

Reference Type: Use - Technology

Archival Data:

Birch canoes mentioned in the traditional story of Kapia.

Comments: N/A


American Museum of Natural History, New York

Reference Type: Use - Technology

Archival Data:

There is a model canoe of Myaamia origin made of birch bark which is housed at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City.

Comments: N/A


Petersen, W. 1931

Reference Type: Use - Technology

Archival Data:

Used in processing lead ore, mined by hand from cliffs: "Later, other Indians learned to work deep mines by carrying down wood, building fires, pouring water on the heated rocks, and digging the mineral out with curiously improvised tools such as “buck horns, hoes, old gun-barrels and the like. Most of the labor was performed by the squaws, who drew out the ore thus extracted in birch-bark 'mococks’, and then placed it in a crude furnace built of logs, set fire to the whole, and as the lead melted and ran down, scraped out a place large enough for it to settle and form the large flat pieces, known as 'plats’, in which it was transported. Each of these bars weighed from thirty to seventy pounds, and hundreds of tons of lead were made by these crude methods.’’

Comments: N/A


McCafferty, M. 2003

Reference Type: Related Info

Archival Data:

In Miami-Illinois, "birch bark" is /wi:kwe:hsi/. The term for the tree was /wi:kwe:hsimi$i/. The term and related terms appear in the "Gravier" dictionary. The Miami did not use the bark for canoes; they only had a term for the tree, the bark and the canoes made from that bark; the term being from when they lived further northeast. 

Gravier dictionary references for birch: (Masthay's edition): 8ic8essi canot d'ecorce idem ecorce de boulau ("bark canoe, also birch bark") /wiikweehsi/ (p. 232). 8ic8essimingi bouleau arbre. This means: "birch, a (kind of) tree"/wiikweehsimi$i.  8ic8essing8eki canot de bois fait comme un canot d'ecorce "a wooden canoe made like a birchbark canoe" /wiikweehsiinkweeki, literally 'it-is-birchbark-face', i.e., it has the appearance of a birchbark canoe.

 

 

Comments: N/A

Gleason, H.A. and Cronquist, A. 1991

Reference Type: Habitat

Archival Data :

Occurs as an pioneer species after disturbance (fire, flood, etc.) in moist or dry soils in the northern portions of eastern Myaamia lands, becoming more abundant further north.

Comments: N/A


Iverson, L., Prasad, A., Hale, B., Sutherland, E. 1998

Reference Type: Ecological Info

Archival Data :

The paper birch is a disturbance-adapted species found on cool, moist sites, often in conifer-hardwood forests. These species are not fire-dependent, but a strong pioneer after fire, sprouting from root collar in trees less than 50 years old.

Comments: N/A

Kenton, E. 1925

Reference Type: Related Info

Archival Data:

Father Dablon, traveling with Father Marquette, described "Kiskakon" tribal members who were travelling in the vicinity of the site where Father Marquette had died and was buried two years earlier (1675), near the shores of Lake Michigan, opened the grave, cleaned and dried the bones and put them in a box of birch bark to bring them to the Mission at St. Ignace where they belonged.

Comments: N/A


Climate Change Program Staff 2020

Reference Type: Related Info

Archival Data:

The Great Lakes Indian Fish and Wildlife Commission initiated a seed bank project to gather and store seeds of miinikaanan (Ojibway), paper birch, as a proactive response to the ongoing negative impacts of climate change and the emerald ash borer on the paper birch population.Seeds are being stored at the National Center for Resource Preservation in Colorado. 

Comments: N/A


Wrobel, A. 2015

Reference Type: Related Info

Archival Data:

Anishinaabeg use the bark of birch trees (wiigwaasaatig) for winnow baskets for rice, baskets for gathering berries, and for making canoes. Trees are harvested from northern upland hardwood forests, lowland softwood forests, aspen forests and paper birch forests. Regarding harvesting: "Once a tree is selected, harvesters will often test the bark and make a small cut in order to check the thickness. The outer bark (the part to be harvested) is usually no more than 1/8 inch thick. At this point you should be able to tell if the bark is ready to come off. If the thickness is appropriate for its intended purpose and the bark is ready, the harvester will often remove a test strip. This test strip can be bent in all diretions to assess flexibility and check for potential weaknesses. Next harvesters will offer a gift of tobacco and words before continuing with the harvest, thanking this living relative for its gifts".

Comments: More details on the harvesting process are found in this article. – Michael Gonella


Bohman, Alexandra 2022

Reference Type: Related Info

Archival Data:

Due to a noticed decline in paper birch tree population, the Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior Chippewa are actively reforesting this species. Seeds were gathered and then spread in the winter to allow for natural, cold stratification of the seeds to increase germination rates in the spring. 

Comments: N/A


Masthay, C. 2002

Reference Type: Related Info

Archival Data:

The Miami-Illinois word for birch bark, or for the canoe made from the birch bark, is wiikweehsi. The term wiikweehsiinkweeki describes a wooden canoe made like and with the appearance of a birch bark canoe, but not actually made from birch bark, and literally means it is birch bark faced.

Comments: N/A


Thwaites, R.G. (ed.) 1966

Reference Type: Related Info

Archival Data:

It is possible that the Myaamia made birch-bark canoes considering the paper birch is present, although not abundant, in the ancestral Myaamia territory. One citation that argues against this possibility: "We took leave our Illinois around the end of June, around three o'clock in the afternoon, we embark in the sight of all the people, who admire our little canoes [made from birch bark], for they have never seen any like them" ("Nous prenons conge de nos Ilinois sur la fin de Juin, vers les trois heures spres midy, nous nous embarquons a la veue de tous ces peuples, qui admiroient nos petits Canots, n'en ayant jamais veu de semblables").

Comments: N/A


Dunn, J.P. 1908

Reference Type: Related Info

Archival Data:

"The Miamis did not use birch-bark canoes, which the Algonquians usually called tci-maun, but they sometimes made canoes of hickory or elm bark. The name for these is la-kik-kwi-mis-so-li or bark canoe".

Comments: N/A

Legends

  • L.: L. stands for Carl Linneaus, a Swedish botanist and zoologist living from 1707 - 1778, who formed the binomial nomenclature system for scientific naming of species (the two part name). His initial after a scientific name indicates he was the authority for that species name.
  • sp.: Indicates the actual species name cannot or need not be specified. Example: Lilium sp. indicates a single species in the genus Lilium that is not known or does not need to be specified.
  • spp.: (plural) indicates "several species", two or more species of the given genus. Example: Lilium spp. indicates 2 or more species in the genus that cannot or do not need to be distinguished.
  • Use - Unknown: A record for this plant exists but does not include explicit information about the plant's cultural use. It is probable the Myaamia used the plant.
  • Botanical Sources: Sources of any botanical data for this plant species that is not related to its cultural use or significance.
  • Related Sources: Data indirectly related to Myaamia ethnobotany, including non-Myaamia uses of the plant in contemporary and historic times.
  • Myaamia Archival Sources: All records of plant use obtained directly from a Myaamia tribal member in an interview, recorded by a second party or by self-recording.
  • Undetermined (Plant Use): There exists use or other information about a certain, unknown plant species, but the specific species has not yet been determined.
  • Medicinal: For the purposes of this database, medicinal uses of plants and medicinal knowledge are defined as: Commonly held communal knowledge regarding the use of plant-based substances that aid in maintaining a healthy mind, body or spirit, including tonics and teas.
  • Technology: For the purposes of this database, technological uses of plants are defined as: Plants used in the making of food processing, canoes, rafts, dyes, tools, utensils, weapons, hunting and fishing gear (i.e. net, weir, etc.), cordage, string, rope, fodder plant species, firewood, any plants used in trade, etc.
  • Material: For the purposes of this database, material uses of plants are defined as: Plants used in construction of dwellings (floor mats, roofing, side walls), furniture, baskets, storage items, musical instruments, games, crafts, jewelry, cordage used in crafts, etc.
  • Food: For the purposes of this database, food uses of plants are defined as: Plants used as consumed food, spices and seasonings, but not teas or tonics.
  • Customs: For the purposes of this database, customary uses of plants are defined as: Plants involved in a customary ceremony, ritual or traditional event, including ritual smoking, chewing tobacco, war rituals, special mats used to sit on during ceremonies. Customary uses of plants, in this database, does not including plants used for recreation (material), structures where ceremonies take place (material) or medicinal smoking (medicinal).
  • Eastern Myaamia Lands: Eastern Myaamia lands (eastern myaamionki) are centered around northern Indiana, and including western Ohio, eastern Illinois, southern Michigan, and the northernmost portions of Kentucky.
  • Western Myaamia Lands: Western Myaamia lands (western myaamionki) include western Kansas and northeastern Oklahoma.