* . *
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
Thursday, November 6, 2025
Earth-News
  • Home
  • Business
  • Entertainment
    Trixie Mattel to share journey in entertainment, advocacy at UW–Madison – WKOW

    Trixie Mattel to Share Her Inspiring Journey in Entertainment and Advocacy at UW-Madison

    Cleveland State to Broadcast Six Basketball Games on Rock Entertainment Sports Network – csuvikings.com

    Cleveland State to Broadcast Six Basketball Games on Rock Entertainment Sports Network – csuvikings.com

    Can Caesars Entertainment’s (CZR) Investment in Digital Offset Las Vegas Weakness? – simplywall.st

    How do you spell success? ‘Spelling Bee’ lands at Surfside Playhouse – Florida Today

    How Do You Spell Success? Catch ‘Spelling Bee’ Live at Surfside Playhouse!

    Belmont Names Debbie Carroll Head of New Center for Mental Health in Entertainment – Billboard

    Debbie Carroll Named Leader of Groundbreaking New Center for Mental Health in Entertainment

    Call of Duty Movie’s Plot Setting Revealed in New Rumor – Yahoo

    Exciting New Rumor Reveals the Plot Setting of the Call of Duty Movie!

  • General
  • Health
  • News

    Cracking the Code: Why China’s Economic Challenges Aren’t Shaking Markets, Unlike America’s” – Bloomberg

    Trump’s Narrow Window to Spread the Truth About Harris

    Trump’s Narrow Window to Spread the Truth About Harris

    Israel-Gaza war live updates: Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh assassinated in Iran, group says

    Israel-Gaza war live updates: Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh assassinated in Iran, group says

    PAP Boss to Niger Delta Youths, Stay Away from the Protest

    PAP Boss to Niger Delta Youths, Stay Away from the Protest

    Court Restricts Protests In Lagos To Freedom, Peace Park

    Court Restricts Protests In Lagos To Freedom, Peace Park

    Fans React to Jazz Jennings’ Inspiring Weight Loss Journey

    Fans React to Jazz Jennings’ Inspiring Weight Loss Journey

    Trending Tags

    • Trump Inauguration
    • United Stated
    • White House
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Technology
    How We Lost Ourselves to Technology—and How We Can Come Back – The Free Press

    How Technology Took Over Our Lives-and How We Can Take Back Control

    Sleeper Picks: World Wide Technology Championship – PGA Tour

    Discover the Ultimate Sleeper Picks for the World Wide Technology Championship

    Rowland.ai Named Disruptive Technology of the Year by The Energy Council – GlobeNewswire

    Rowland.ai Named Disruptive Technology of the Year by Industry Leaders

    Peraton Honored As Silver Stevie® Award Winner in 2025 Stevie Awards for Technology Excellence – The AI Journal

    Peraton Honored As Silver Stevie® Award Winner in 2025 Stevie Awards for Technology Excellence – The AI Journal

    [News] China Makes Breakthrough in Chip Technology, Paving the Way for Lithography Advancements – TrendForce

    [News] China Makes Breakthrough in Chip Technology, Paving the Way for Lithography Advancements – TrendForce

    Can RFID technology solve the global medicine shortage crisis? – World Health Expo

    Can RFID technology solve the global medicine shortage crisis? – World Health Expo

    Trending Tags

    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • Mark Zuckerberg
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business
  • Entertainment
    Trixie Mattel to share journey in entertainment, advocacy at UW–Madison – WKOW

    Trixie Mattel to Share Her Inspiring Journey in Entertainment and Advocacy at UW-Madison

    Cleveland State to Broadcast Six Basketball Games on Rock Entertainment Sports Network – csuvikings.com

    Cleveland State to Broadcast Six Basketball Games on Rock Entertainment Sports Network – csuvikings.com

    Can Caesars Entertainment’s (CZR) Investment in Digital Offset Las Vegas Weakness? – simplywall.st

    How do you spell success? ‘Spelling Bee’ lands at Surfside Playhouse – Florida Today

    How Do You Spell Success? Catch ‘Spelling Bee’ Live at Surfside Playhouse!

    Belmont Names Debbie Carroll Head of New Center for Mental Health in Entertainment – Billboard

    Debbie Carroll Named Leader of Groundbreaking New Center for Mental Health in Entertainment

    Call of Duty Movie’s Plot Setting Revealed in New Rumor – Yahoo

    Exciting New Rumor Reveals the Plot Setting of the Call of Duty Movie!

  • General
  • Health
  • News

    Cracking the Code: Why China’s Economic Challenges Aren’t Shaking Markets, Unlike America’s” – Bloomberg

    Trump’s Narrow Window to Spread the Truth About Harris

    Trump’s Narrow Window to Spread the Truth About Harris

    Israel-Gaza war live updates: Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh assassinated in Iran, group says

    Israel-Gaza war live updates: Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh assassinated in Iran, group says

    PAP Boss to Niger Delta Youths, Stay Away from the Protest

    PAP Boss to Niger Delta Youths, Stay Away from the Protest

    Court Restricts Protests In Lagos To Freedom, Peace Park

    Court Restricts Protests In Lagos To Freedom, Peace Park

    Fans React to Jazz Jennings’ Inspiring Weight Loss Journey

    Fans React to Jazz Jennings’ Inspiring Weight Loss Journey

    Trending Tags

    • Trump Inauguration
    • United Stated
    • White House
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Technology
    How We Lost Ourselves to Technology—and How We Can Come Back – The Free Press

    How Technology Took Over Our Lives-and How We Can Take Back Control

    Sleeper Picks: World Wide Technology Championship – PGA Tour

    Discover the Ultimate Sleeper Picks for the World Wide Technology Championship

    Rowland.ai Named Disruptive Technology of the Year by The Energy Council – GlobeNewswire

    Rowland.ai Named Disruptive Technology of the Year by Industry Leaders

    Peraton Honored As Silver Stevie® Award Winner in 2025 Stevie Awards for Technology Excellence – The AI Journal

    Peraton Honored As Silver Stevie® Award Winner in 2025 Stevie Awards for Technology Excellence – The AI Journal

    [News] China Makes Breakthrough in Chip Technology, Paving the Way for Lithography Advancements – TrendForce

    [News] China Makes Breakthrough in Chip Technology, Paving the Way for Lithography Advancements – TrendForce

    Can RFID technology solve the global medicine shortage crisis? – World Health Expo

    Can RFID technology solve the global medicine shortage crisis? – World Health Expo

    Trending Tags

    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • Mark Zuckerberg
No Result
View All Result
Earth-News
No Result
View All Result
Home Science

The mystery of the Coast Salish woolly dog

March 5, 2024
in Science
The mystery of the Coast Salish woolly dog
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

They were small, white, and fluffy. For thousands of years, they were treasured for their unique wool and respected as if they were human. Then, in a matter of decades, they were gone.

The Coast Salish woolly dog was once a fixture in communities across what’s known today as the Pacific Northwest. With pointy ears and an upturned tail, the canine looked a bit like the modern Samoyed. And now, recent genomic sequencing echoes what many members of Indigenous nations surrounding the Salish Sea have always said: that their ancestors carefully bred the dog for many generations—long before the arrival of European domestic dogs—shearing their thick hair and weaving it into blankets imbued with cultural and spiritual significance.

“Whoever put it on would be enveloped by the power of the prayer,” says Michael Pavel, a Skokomish/Twana traditional knowledge keeper and one of the study’s coauthors.

But by the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the combination of introduced diseases, forced assimilation, and other culturally oppressive colonial policies devastated the dogs’ caretakers, and, as a result, led to the extinction of their venerated companions, elders say.

“The dog was raised specifically for these blankets, but it became a casualty of the colonial times,” says Steven Point, Stó:lō Nation grand chief, chancellor of the University of British Columbia, and former lieutenant governor of British Columbia.

Point gave researchers at the Smithsonian Institution permission to analyze the fleece of Mutton, a woolly dog believed to have been raised in Stó:lō territory. British naturalist and ethnographer George Gibbs cared for Mutton during the Northwest Boundary Survey in the late 1850s, and after the dog fell ill and died in 1859, Gibbs donated his pelt to the Smithsonian. But it wasn’t until evolutionary molecular biologist Audrey Lin saw a photo of Mutton’s pelt in a 2021 Hakai Magazine story that anyone at the Smithsonian pursued testing the specimen to understand its history.

“The nature of genetic sampling or genetic analysis is destructive, so we wanted to know if the communities would be OK with this sort of research,” says Lin, who at the time was a postdoctoral researcher at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of National History.

When Point first heard about the pelt and the project, he was ecstatic. His mother had relayed stories to him from her grandmother about woolly dogs, but no one alive today had ever seen one. “To find out that somebody actually had one was kind of like finding an old Rembrandt somewhere,” he says. “It’s confirming the stories that we’ve always told. It’s confirming part of our history.”

The results of the genetic analysis were published in the journal Science in December 2023 in a study that combines Western scientific research, traditional knowledge, and historical records.

‘Little beings’

While some scholars around the turn of the 20th century speculated that woolly dogs hailed from Japan or another part of the world, the study refutes those claims. Mutton’s DNA indicates that woolly dogs genetically veered from other canines as long as 5,000 years ago. This matches the rough age of suspected woolly dog remains found at archaeological sites around the Pacific Northwest, according to a 2020 study.

Even Mutton, who lived after European settlers first arrived in the area, had only about 16 percent European ancestry, according to the research, suggesting that tribes went to great lengths to prevent their unique breed of dog from intermixing with others.

Debra Sparrow, a Musqueam Nation master weaver and study coauthor, learned about woolly dogs from her grandfather. He drove her one time to see Poplar Island on the Fraser River. “He pointed and said, ‘That’s where they kept the woolly dogs for this village,’” she recalls.

In addition to islands, some communities might have housed them in pens or kept them in their longhouses. In an 1856 painting by Paul Kane, a woman weaves a blanket inside as a small white creature sits next to her.

Sparrow says her grandfather recalled playing under a loom as a child while the women in his family weaved. Their blankets twined dog wool, mountain goat wool, and stinging nettle fibers, and the women applied a rock powder, known today as diatomaceous earth, to ward off bugs to preserve the blankets for ceremonies.

As her grandfather outlined the steps of this weaving process, she says, he mentioned that they used to source their wool from small, fox-like creatures they kept in pens. They didn’t look like other dogs, he said.

The analysis of Mutton’s pelt identified 28 genes related to hair and follicle regeneration, including ones linked to curly hair in mice, rats, and some dogs, as well as to woolly hair in some humans, providing insight into what made their hair so thick and valuable for weaving. This large collection of genes also reflects the intensity and considerable length of time that the Coast Salish people selectively bred the dogs, according to Logan Kistler, an anthropologist at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History who contributed to the study. “The culture really shaped the dog,” Kistler says.

Though she understands why the term is used, Sparrow bristles when she hears them called “dogs.” It’s not how her grandfather would have referred to them.

“He said, ‘It’s not a dog,’” she recalls. “It was a wild, domesticated little being that every village had because we needed the hair, so it was a gift to us.”

The Skokomish viewed them as on par with people, according to Pavel. They constructed villages, not pens, for them. “We looked at how they cared for themselves and for their children, for their families,” he says. “We saw them as societies.”

When did the woolly dog disappear?

The study doesn’t pinpoint exactly when woolly dogs went extinct or their decline began, but the traditional knowledge incorporated into the study counters the persistent, non-Native narrative: That Coast Salish people gave up their weaving tradition—and thus their woolly dogs—of their own accord, with the arrival of British and American machine-made blankets in the 19th century.

The manufactured blankets were popular, Point says, but “I don’t know if you could strictly draw a line between the disappearance of the woolly dog and the introduction of Hudson’s Bay blankets. I think that’s too simplistic.”

By all accounts, families were devoted to the dogs. It doesn’t make sense that they suddenly would have become indifferent to them when manufactured blankets arrived, says coauthor Senaqwila Wyss, who curated an exhibit on woolly dogs at the Museum of North Vancouver. During an emergency, for example, women would scoop up only their children and their woolly dogs, according to accounts from Squamish elders that Wyss found.

Instead, population declines and efforts to eradicate Coast Salish culture played a significant role, the study says. Smallpox and other diseases sometimes killed upwards of 90 percent of a community. Boarding schools in Canada and the United States sought to erase Indigenous identities and history, while the Indian Act in Canada deprived women who could pass on their knowledge of weaving and woolly dogs of basic rights. In some areas, law enforcement and government agents seized or ordered the dogs killed as part of the effort to destroy their culture, according to oral histories relayed by multiple coauthors of the study.

The animals simply couldn’t survive without their caretakers or the preservation of their culture, the study says.

“We didn’t give up on the woolly dog for the benefit of something that was easier to acquire,” Pavel says. “It was taken from us.”

The afterlife of the woolly dog

Recently, a family in British Columbia noticed their deceased dog looked like renderings of Coast Salish woolly dogs. Because the nature of their disappearance isn’t entirely known, it’s possible that some isolated communities might have dogs with a small proportion of woolly dog genes. “But they aren’t like woolly dogs,” Lin says.

Instead, Pavel says, the legacy of the woolly dog is in its teachings of “unconditional love, of loyalty and zeal for life.” They have become an emblem for the Skokomish Indian Tribe, appearing on baskets and in the tribe’s logo.

Sparrow has drawn inspiration from them. She’s creating a traditional blanket using the process her grandfather laid out for her. Though she’ll have to substitute sheep’s wool for the woolly dog hair, she knows she’s honoring her ancestors and relatives. But there’s an epistemological lesson to be learned from the study of the woolly dog, too.

While Sparrow expresses gratitude for the collaboration with scientists, she says Coast Salish nations didn’t need DNA to support what they already knew: “We are always having to prove our existence, prove our intelligence, prove who we are to the world.”

>>> Read full article>>>
Copyright for syndicated content belongs to the linked Source : National Geographic – https://www.nationalgeographic.com/premium/article/native-woolly-dogs-evolution

Tags: Coastmysteryscience
Previous Post

Wild Memphis: how a new paddle-powered tour sees the musical city in a new light

Next Post

Marlow on ‘Kudlow’: Democrats Got Bailed Out by the Supreme Court Decision

Dynamic and dangerous vs. Dortmund, Foden must be part of England’s World Cup squad – ESPN

Dynamic and Dangerous vs. Dortmund: Why Foden Must Be in England’s World Cup Squad

November 6, 2025
Democrats tap anxiety over Trump’s economy in victories that signal midterm strategy – USA Today

Democrats Leverage Economic Worries Over Trump to Secure Crucial Midterm Victories

November 6, 2025
Trixie Mattel to share journey in entertainment, advocacy at UW–Madison – WKOW

Trixie Mattel to Share Her Inspiring Journey in Entertainment and Advocacy at UW-Madison

November 6, 2025
Iowa seeks federal funding to support rural health care, Gov. Kim Reynolds announces – Iowa Capital Dispatch

Iowa Launches Bold Effort to Secure Federal Funds for Boosting Rural Health Care, Governor Kim Reynolds Reveals

November 6, 2025
Federal judge warns Justice Department it may be veering close to mishandling evidence in Comey case – CNN

Federal judge warns Justice Department it may be veering close to mishandling evidence in Comey case – CNN

November 6, 2025
Deep Dive Into Shark Ecology Provides Path to Conservation – Georgia Institute of Technology

Unlocking Shark Secrets: Exploring Their Ecology to Drive Conservation Efforts

November 5, 2025
Science diplomacy in small states: a case study of global players’ engagement in Slovakia – Nature

How Small States Like Slovakia Master the Art of Global Science Diplomacy

November 5, 2025
Academics welcome ‘change of tone’ on Serbia but fear sanctions – Science|Business

Academics Praise New Approach to Serbia but Express Ongoing Concerns Over Sanctions

November 5, 2025
The $1.25 Dollar Tree Pantry Staple I Buy Every Time I Go – Yahoo

The $1.25 Dollar Tree Pantry Staple I Buy Every Time I Go – Yahoo

November 5, 2025
How We Lost Ourselves to Technology—and How We Can Come Back – The Free Press

How Technology Took Over Our Lives-and How We Can Take Back Control

November 5, 2025

Categories

Archives

November 2025
M T W T F S S
 12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
« Oct    
Earth-News.info

The Earth News is an independent English-language daily published Website from all around the World News

Browse by Category

  • Business (20,132)
  • Ecology (904)
  • Economy (926)
  • Entertainment (21,798)
  • General (18,015)
  • Health (9,967)
  • Lifestyle (938)
  • News (22,149)
  • People (927)
  • Politics (937)
  • Science (16,137)
  • Sports (21,426)
  • Technology (15,906)
  • World (910)

Recent News

Dynamic and dangerous vs. Dortmund, Foden must be part of England’s World Cup squad – ESPN

Dynamic and Dangerous vs. Dortmund: Why Foden Must Be in England’s World Cup Squad

November 6, 2025
Democrats tap anxiety over Trump’s economy in victories that signal midterm strategy – USA Today

Democrats Leverage Economic Worries Over Trump to Secure Crucial Midterm Victories

November 6, 2025
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

© 2023 earth-news.info

No Result
View All Result

© 2023 earth-news.info

No Result
View All Result

© 2023 earth-news.info

Go to mobile version