Pomo Indian baskets and their makers . Bu-she-mia Design, in Spirals. {Plate 2/J ?,fy POSro /XD/AX D.\SKET.\.. POMO TsAIS \Plat,- An odd idea is embodied in a design known as ka-tuni-tahi-bah, or lizard tail, executed thus [ ], the idea being of alizards tail cut off and wriggling. A common, and one of the finest, Pomo designs in plate 17, isknown widely as bu-di-le ; bu is the Indian word for the bulbousplant known as Brodiaea, used as food by the Pomos, and di-leis forehead. Indians have frequently given me the translation potato head, but I have never got any clue to the connectionbetween t


Pomo Indian baskets and their makers . Bu-she-mia Design, in Spirals. {Plate 2/J ?,fy POSro /XD/AX D.\SKET.\.. POMO TsAIS \Plat,- An odd idea is embodied in a design known as ka-tuni-tahi-bah, or lizard tail, executed thus [ ], the idea being of alizards tail cut off and wriggling. A common, and one of the finest, Pomo designs in plate 17, isknown widely as bu-di-le ; bu is the Indian word for the bulbousplant known as Brodiaea, used as food by the Pomos, and di-leis forehead. Indians have frequently given me the translation potato head, but I have never got any clue to the connectionbetween the name and the design. Plate 15 is a very common design among the Pomos, and, whenwell executed, one of the most beautiful. Among basket col-lectors it has long been interpreted as a hill with pine trees. Inquiry of Indians on numerous occasions has elucidated but POMO INDIAN BASKETS 7,1


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectindianb, bookyear1902