DeSotoSky
Gold Member
- Joined
- Mar 21, 2011
- Messages
- 6,642
Hello and welcome to the Sunday Picture Show. Share your Buck knives with others by posting pictures of them here. New or old, plain or custom, user or safe queen, one or a collection, we love to see them all. This weekly tradition was started in 2010 by ItsTooEarly (Armand Hernandez) and Oregon (Steve Dunn). Help keep the tradition alive. Feel free to click that 'LIKE' but lets not let it replace discussing and complimenting each others knives. Above all, enjoy the show. DeSotoSky (Roger Yost)

November is Native American Heritage Month. In 1990, a joint resolution was approved by George H.W. Bush, which called for November to be named National Native American Heritage Month. In 1990, the U.S. Census identified 1.96 million people classified as American Indian and Alaska Native. Fast forward, the 2020 Census reported 9.7 million people identified as Native American and Alaska Native, A huge difference but it is difficult to make conclusions from one census count to the next because the Census Bureau adjusts questions each census to better capture demographic information. For example, the 1990 Census respondents didn’t have the option to identify as multi-racial. The Census Bureau tracks population across 695 American Indian areas, Native Alaska areas, and Hawaiian homelands. The 10 largest Native American tribes are Navajo, Cherokee, Sioux, Chippewa, Choctaw, Apache, Pueblo, Iroquois, Creek, and Blackfeet.
For this weeks show I have a Brian Yellowhorse 110. The handles are Ironwood, Turquoise, and Red Spiny Oyster. A 2014 issue, the tang has the 110 50th anniversary stamp. The brass bolsters are enhanced with a deeply engraved Elk profile. This was a Smoky Mountain exclusive numbering 100.





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