The Canadian province of British Columbia has a rich history of totem poles. Some of the only pre-1900s totem poles are found here.
you would find it in Alberta Du you guys are so stupid I'm sorry but I don't know where it is
totem poles are monumental sculptures carved from great trees mostly Western Redcedar by indigenous cultures along the pacific northwest coast of north America. so the places where you are most likely to see totem poles are Alaska, Colorado, british Columbia and other countries on the pacific nothwest coast of north America.
You can find a lot of pictures of North American totem poles in magazines, art gallery, newspapers, and Native American museums. You can also find a lot of North American totem poles on Google images since you will find a lot of them.
totem's
norhtwest
You are most likely to not find a totem pole in regions outside of the Pacific Northwest, where Indigenous cultures such as the Haida, Tlingit, and Coast Salish traditionally created them. Totem poles are primarily associated with the cultures of these coastal tribes in Canada and the United States. Areas with different cultural traditions, such as the deserts of the Southwest or the plains of the Midwest, would not typically feature totem poles.
British Columbia, Canada.
The Anishinabe (Ojibwe) people did not carve Totem as totem poles are most well know. Artists did beadwork, birchbark boxes and baskets and dreamcatchers. The clan (totemic system) was used however. Of the original 5 clans there are now more than 21, represented by various symbolic animals such as Wolf, deer, whitefish,loon and bear to name a few.
Indians, or should i say native Americans, practiced the art of totem pole making for hundreds, if not thousands of years. when they encountered Europeans, however, the natives saw metal tools and it became easier to make the totem poles, allowing them to increase in size. The reason that there aren't that many "old" totem poles are due to that because they were make of wood, they decomposed over time, so we wouldn't be able to find for example a 1000 year totem. But i am almost sure that they would have been making smaller ones at the time.
because it rotted
Totem poles can be found in Western B.C., as far north as Alaska, and as far south as Washington State. They are found all over southwest Alaska, with at least a few in almost every town. In B.C. they are found in Vancouver and the Fraser Valley. They would most often be found facing a river or an ocean. They are placed there to welcome visitors. This is because most people travelled by canoe. Most of the older ones have been taken down and placed in parks, museums, and even small villages.