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Detail of the Entrance gate to the Waitangi Regional Park, New Zealand.
Detail of a Totem Pole in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. Portrait Orientation. Landscape orientation also available.
Driftwood totem on dunes at Ohope, Bay off Plenty, New Zealand.
Nouméa, South Province, New Caledonia: a 'fleche faitiére' (literally 'rooftop arrow') with a stern face - an indigenous Melanesian symbol that came to represent the Kanak people and the independence movement. A respected emblem of the Kanak chiefdom, the 'fleche faitiére', is a traditional element of Kanak architecture, which dominates and adorns the cone-shaped thatched roof of the large huts of a clan. It is made with houp (Montrouziera cauliflora), a rot-proof wood from high-altitude forests.
A hand carved Polynesian totem in Kula Botanical Gardens, on Maui Hawaii
Hawaiian wooden statue at the Puuhonua O Honaunau National Park at the beautiful Honaunau Bay on the west coast of Big Island, Hawaii
Beautiful traditional Maori sculptures in Whakarewarewa village, North Island of New Zealand
Nature scenics Haida Gwaii, British Columbia
Detail from a memorial to European Missionaries on Isle Of Pines - carved totems
Carrancas are totem poles typical of the region of the São Francisco River in northeastern Brazil. They are traditionally placed on the bows of vessels for protection
Indian art, mapuche people on Pucon vulcan. Chilean Patagonia.
Middle of the World (Mitad del Mundo). Quito.
Maori carvings in Rotorua, North Island, New Zealand
Totem poles are monuments created by First Nations of the Pacific Northwest to represent and commemorate ancestry, histories, or events.Creaded out of red cedar and erected to be visible within the community.\nThey document stories and histories of clan members using stylised humans animals, and family crests.
Māori culture is an integral part of life in Aotearoa, New Zealand.
Totem poles, Nature scenics Haida Gwaii, British Columbia
Tall Hat  totem pole of the Gitksan people in Kitwancool, British Columbia, Canada
Liquiça / Likisa, East Timor / Timor Leste: traditional wood carving - capital of a column at the 'uma fukun', a traditional Timorese sacred ritual house / shrine, home of powerful ancestors' spirits, links all families of the same lineage together in harmony, an essential point of reference for tribal union.
Driftwood totem on dunes at Ohope, Bay off Plenty, New Zealand.
Vancouver, Canada - August 11, 2017: Totem in the forest near Capilano Bridge
Pouwhenua carved wooden land posts used by Māori to mark territorial boundaries or places of significance, found throughout New Zealand. Dawson Falls, North Island, New Zealand
Close-up view of old carved wooden pagan Slavic idol standing by red brick Kremlin wall. Soft focus. Copy space for your text. Religion symbols theme.
The 150 year old totem poles are located in Kispiax on the Yellowhead Highway in Northwest British Columbia
Old wooden structures and protection idols at ancient Hawaiian site Pu’uhonua O Honaunau National Historical Park on Big Island, Hawaii
Ketchikan, Alaska: 09/01/2024- Chief Kyan totem pole in Whale Park, Ketchikan, Alaska
Set of Kamchatka Aboriginal totem pole on white
Detail of raven atop Haa leelk'u has Kaa sta heeni deiyi Pole at Sitka National Historical Park, Sitka, Alaska, USA. Carved in 1996 for the Southeast Alaskan Indian Cultural Center.
Driftwood totem on dunes at Ohope, Bay off Plenty, New Zealand.
Vancouver, Canada - May 2, 2012 : Upper section of a West Coast First Nation totem pole seen from below.
Free Images: "bestof:Pou whakarae - Maori stockade post (9835).jpg A wooden human figure The eyes are made of paua shell and there is moko tattoos on the face Its hands are on its"
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