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Whaling lance bomb
Whaling lance bomb

Whaling lance bomb

Date19th century
Object number00033893
NameLance bomb
MediumMetal, cork, leather
DimensionsOverall: 27 x 27 x 390 mm, 0.48 kg
ClassificationsTools and equipment
Credit LineANMM Collection Purchased with USA Bicentennial Gift funds
DescriptionThe hand-held shoulder gun was used in whaling during the late 18th and early 19th centuries. The projectile was a bomb lance or whaling bomb, which exploded after it had pierced the whale.HistoryEarly killing methods were as dangerous to the crews as they were deadly to the whale. Hand-thrown harpoons merely attached a rope to the whale to stop it from escaping. Actual killing of the wounded and thrashing mammal was done at close range. A long lance pierced the lungs or heart for a slow death. Bomb lances were introduced with shoulder guns to solve the problem of getting close enough to a whale to lance it, particularly in ice fields, and eliminate the often hazardous lancing operation.SignificanceThis whaling lance is typical of the 19th century whaling period in the Southern Seas.