See also: deer-pound
- 1770  (1911)  [Caribou] walk along them [hunting fences], until they are drawn into the pound. . . .
- 1824  (1955)  In walking about at this place I saw an Old Pond for ensnaring Reindeer &c & two Winter Encampments.
1b n. Hist. an enclosure, corral, or large trap into which the Indians drove buffalo in order to slaughter them.
See also: buffalo pound
- 1772  (1908)  We are preparing to proceed tomorrow, to be in readiness for pounding Buffalo at an Archithinue [Blackfoot] pound.
- 1776  (1901)  . . . the chief led his hunters to its southern end, where there was a pound or enclosure. The fence was about four feet high, and formed of strong stakes of birch-wood, wattled with smaller branches of the same.
- 1879  At the Crossing, about nine miles from here, the Crees have made a pound for killing buffalo, but it remains to be seen if it will be a success.
- 1962  The Indians built a pound, an enclosure surrounded by a four-foot fence made of birch stakes interlaced with branches. An alleyway, funnel-shaped and with a wide mouth, was built in the same way to lead up to the pound.
2 n. Hist. a place where Plains Indians slaughtered buffalo by stampeding them over a precipice.