When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: native american traps and snares

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Trapping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trapping

    Snares are one of the simplest traps and are very effective. [34] They are cheap to produce and easy to set in large numbers. A snare traps an animal around the neck or the body; a snare consists of a noose made usually by wire or a strong string. Snares are widely criticised by animal welfare groups for their cruelty. [35]

  3. Wardell Buffalo Trap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wardell_Buffalo_Trap

    The Wardell Buffalo Trap in Sublette County, Wyoming is a small box canyon used by Native Americans for 500 years during the Late Prehistoric Period. Nearly 55 feet (17 m) of bison bones were found at the site. A campsite and butchering area is located nearby, and evidence has been found for a fence at the entrance to the canyon.

  4. Mantrap (snare) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mantrap_(snare)

    Other traps such as special snares, trap netting, trapping pits, fluidizing solid matter traps [4] and cage traps could be used. Mantraps that use deadly force are illegal in the United States, and in notable tort law cases the trespasser has successfully sued the property owner for damages caused by the mantrap.

  5. Deadfalls and Snares - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deadfalls_and_Snares

    Deadfalls and Snares is one of Harding's Pleasure & Profit Books.First published in 1907, is an instructional book for trappers on the art of building deadfalls from logs, boards and rocks, and making snares and toss poles, for catching all types of furbearers, such as skunk, opossum, raccoon, mink, marten and bear, and coop traps for catching wild turkey and quail.

  6. Fish trap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish_trap

    As fish traps, fishing weirs date back to the Bronze Age in Sweden and to Roman times in the UK. They were used by native North Americans and early settlers to catch fish for trade and to feed their communities. Fish wheel: A fish wheel is a device for catching fish which operates much as a water-powered mill wheel. A wheel complete with ...

  7. Bal-chatri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bal-chatri

    Bal-chatri (/bɑːl tʃʌθri/) are traps designed to catch birds of prey (raptors). The trap essentially consists of a cage baited inside with a conspicuously visible live rodent or small bird, with a series of monofilament nooses attached to the surface to snare the legs of a free-flying raptor that attempts to take the bait. [2]

  8. Archaic–Early Basketmaker Era - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archaic–Early_Basketmaker...

    By 6000 BCE two-thirds of all North American animals weighing more than 100 pounds were extinct and the bison antiquus was the only large animal to survive on the Great Plains. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] About 5000 BCE Holocene glacial runoff affected Colorado Plateau storm patterns which resulted in significant soil erosion .

  9. Mountain man - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mountain_man

    Jedediah Smith (1799–1831) was a hunter, trapper, and fur trader whose explorations were significant in opening the American West to settlement by Europeans and Americans. Smith is considered the first man of European descent to cross the future state of Nevada ; the first to traverse Utah from north to south and from west to east; and the ...