Archives of aboriginal knowledge Containing all the original paper laid before Congress respecting the history, antiquities, language, ethnology, pictography, rites, superstitions, and mythology, of the Indian tribes of the United States . nd is in the form of a boys top, with theaddition of a stem fifteen or eighteen inches in length. Fig. 5 shows the method ofapplying the spindle to the purposes designed. The spindle is entirely of wood, andthe vessel in which it stands (Fig. 6,) is an earthen bowl, which affords a smoothsurface for the lower point of the spindle to turn upon. Its operation
Archives of aboriginal knowledge Containing all the original paper laid before Congress respecting the history, antiquities, language, ethnology, pictography, rites, superstitions, and mythology, of the Indian tribes of the United States . nd is in the form of a boys top, with theaddition of a stem fifteen or eighteen inches in length. Fig. 5 shows the method ofapplying the spindle to the purposes designed. The spindle is entirely of wood, andthe vessel in which it stands (Fig. 6,) is an earthen bowl, which affords a smoothsurface for the lower point of the spindle to turn upon. Its operation may be thusdescribed. The wool or cotton is first prepared by carding. It is then fastened to thespindle near its top, and is held in the left hand. The spindle is held between thethumb and first finger of the right hand, and stands vertically in the earthen bowlThe operator now gives the spindle a twirl, as a boy turns his top, and while it isrevolving, she proceeds to draw out her thread, precisely as is done by our own opera-tives, in using the common spinning-wheel. As soon as the thread is spun, the spindleis turned in an opposite direction, for the purpose of winding up the thread on theportion of it next to the wooden BLA^]KE¥g MABE BY .IME PUEBILO flMOQAMS ®F ME^ MEHWO) r f:
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade186, booksubjectindiansofnorthamerica