AWL: bone. (Willoughby, pp. 237-39)
NEEDLE: sewing mats together; bone (“splinter bone of a cranes legge”) half of the split rib of a deer. (Morton, p. 135; Willoughby, pp. 244-45)
BAG FOR CARRYING PARCHED CORNMEAL: leather; long pouch worn around the waist. (Wood, p. 76)
TOBACCO BAG: for carrying pipe and tobacco; worn hung down the back. (Williams; pp. 72-3)
QUIVER: contain arrows; woven bulrushes; length one yard; one is described as having a decorative band about one foot wide on the top and about six inches wide at the bottom of the quiver, in red diamonds and patterns of other colors. (Winslow, p. 307; Howe, p. 71)
CLUB: weapon. (Gookin, p. 152)
TOMAHAWK: weapon; wood handle with sharp stone fastened into it. (Gookin, p. 152)
SHIELD: bark. (Gookin, p. 152)
COMB: one example, made of moose horn, perhaps unique in shape, consisted of small set of teeth at the end of a very long handle. (Bushnell, p. 683)
DUGOUT CANOE: pine or chestnut; size variable—some 40-50 feet long will carry 20 people; others are about one and a half to two feet wide and twenty feet long; hollowed out of tree trunks. (Wood, p. 102; Gookin, p. 152)