. Annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution . he implement having t)ecn rolled up and down from rim tobase, leaving approximately parallel , as is indieuted insome of the specimens illusti-ated. After the malleating process wasfinished, the neck and rim were smoothed down and decorated invarious ways, most generally by impressing cords into the soft clay,producing patterns, or by merely repeating indentations of the cordlaid on flat or doubled up, making deep indentations. This treatmentextended to the margin of the lip and, i


. Annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution . he implement having t)ecn rolled up and down from rim tobase, leaving approximately parallel , as is indieuted insome of the specimens illusti-ated. After the malleating process wasfinished, the neck and rim were smoothed down and decorated invarious ways, most generally by impressing cords into the soft clay,producing patterns, or by merely repeating indentations of the cordlaid on flat or doubled up, making deep indentations. This treatmentextended to the margin of the lip and, in cases, to the interior and incised lines and punctures are seen in numerous instances,and in the vessels suggesting Iroquoian relationships the patternsresemble those characterizing the Iroquoian ware. The National Museum collections contain fragments of a well-madevessel from Lake Nipigon, western Ontario, 500 miles north of Two Rivers. The ware is ofmuch better make than thepottery south of Lake Su-perior, and has rather de-cided Iroquoian paste is silicious and.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectindians, bookyear1895