. Annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution . were with the Pueblos, but one turn was set somewhatdirectly on the edge of the preceding turn and was attached to it bypressure and by drawing down the edges, both exterior and from many sections fracture along the stri|) junctions, thusrevealing the width of the tillets and the manner of their beginning of a coil is shown in figure 30 a. Attachment was acconi-plished by drawing l)oth edges of the fillet down over the convex edgeof the preceding turn, as is


. Annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution . were with the Pueblos, but one turn was set somewhatdirectly on the edge of the preceding turn and was attached to it bypressure and by drawing down the edges, both exterior and from many sections fracture along the stri|) junctions, thusrevealing the width of the tillets and the manner of their beginning of a coil is shown in figure 30 a. Attachment was acconi-plished by drawing l)oth edges of the fillet down over the convex edgeof the preceding turn, as is seen in h and v. Commonly the walls wereevened up and the form corrected and developed by the aid of modelingtools. A convex-surfaced implement, a piece of gourd, for example,was held on the inner surface to support the wall, while paddles, rock-ing tools, and scrapers were used to manipulate the exterior the body of the vessel had been brought into approximatelyfinal shape, the margins—or in consti-icted forms the neck and rim—.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectindians, bookyear1895