. Annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution . as an experiment. The mal-leating implement was a Cherokee potters paddle \vliich I had wrappedwith native cord (see figure 38). Use of (ord-wrapped Rocking Tools Of the same general class as the cord-wrapped paddle were othertools, more or less rounded and wrapped with cord. These m&y havebeen applied as paddles, but were usually rocked back and forth, therounder forms being revolved as a roulette. The imiDressions of the. Fig. 38—Cherokee potters paddlewrapped with cord and used inmalleating


. Annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution . as an experiment. The mal-leating implement was a Cherokee potters paddle \vliich I had wrappedwith native cord (see figure 38). Use of (ord-wrapped Rocking Tools Of the same general class as the cord-wrapped paddle were othertools, more or less rounded and wrapped with cord. These m&y havebeen applied as paddles, but were usually rocked back and forth, therounder forms being revolved as a roulette. The imiDressions of the. Fig. 38—Cherokee potters paddlewrapped with cord and used inmalleating the bowl sliown infigure .37. 74 ABORIGINAL POTTERY OF EASTERN TTNITED STATES


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectindians, bookyear1895