Page 129 - J. C. Turner "History and Science of Knots"
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118                     History and Science of Knots

                 The majority were minuscule objects, which had once been tied in whale
             baleen and thong, while some scraps of clothing had remnants of sinew thread
             knots. All samples had been preserved in the permafrost for about 4500
             years. The whale baleen had hardened so much that the knots it held had
             become rigid. Hence with reasonable certainty we can say that the knots were
             Clove Hitch, Lark's Head, Reef and Granny Knot, Overhand Knot, Half Hitch,
             Becket Bend and a Noose based on a parallel centrally pierced Overhand Knot
             (see Fig. 2).
                 In a strip of sea mammal hide a very recognizable Sheet Bend structure
             was found [35] (see Fig. 3). Its function could not be determined unambigu-
             ously. Hence it may have been a bend, part of a loop knot, or something
             else.












                Fig. 3. A Sheet Bend structure excavated at Qeqertasussuk: courtesy B. Gronnow
                 The knots in the thread of the excavated clothing samples were very hard
             to identify. The clearest were Overhand knots, which had functioned as stopper
             knots. There was also a structure which obviously had functioned as a bend,
             but had become so congealed that it was only possible to see that it consisted
             of two interlocking Overhand Knots. It presumably was a Fisherman's Bend
             [1, #1414].
                 It is truly remarkable to note that the knots found at Qeqertasussuk were
             in fact so diverse and real knots, i.e. not merely some haphazard conglomer-
             ations of Half Hitches and Overhand Knots. This indicates that the Saqqaq
             people possessed an impressive knot repertoire and knew how to use it.

             The Later Periods

             It is not until Viking settlers began to colonize Greenland that we could rea-
             sonably have expected influences from the east. In contrast with the period
             from which the Qeqertasussuk Knots stem, we now have come to times of
             which we know with certainty that cultural interaction on several fronts be-
             tween the Inuit and Europeans had already taken place. In the next section
             we shall be concerned with the question about the extent of a possible mutual
             influence in knots and knotting techniques.
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