. Bulletin. Ethnology. are good examples of the native engraver's art, although thefe are not designed either for simply pictorial or for decora- tive effect. The ancient mound builders were clever engrave r s, the technical excellence of their work be- ing well illus- trated by ex- amples from the mounds and dwelling sites of Ross CO., Ohio (Putnam and W i 110 u g h - by), and by others from the Turner mounds in Hamilton CO., Ohio. Shell also was a fa- vorite material for the graver's point, as is illustrated by numerous ornaments re- covered from mounds in the middle Mis- sissippi valley. In


. Bulletin. Ethnology. are good examples of the native engraver's art, although thefe are not designed either for simply pictorial or for decora- tive effect. The ancient mound builders were clever engrave r s, the technical excellence of their work be- ing well illus- trated by ex- amples from the mounds and dwelling sites of Ross CO., Ohio (Putnam and W i 110 u g h - by), and by others from the Turner mounds in Hamilton CO., Ohio. Shell also was a fa- vorite material for the graver's point, as is illustrated by numerous ornaments re- covered from mounds in the middle Mis- sissippi valley. In decorating their earthenware the native tribes often used the stylus with excellent effect. The yielding clay af- forded a tempting surface, and in some cases considera- ble skill was shown,especially by the ancient potters of the lower Gulf states, who executed elaborate scroll designs with great precision (^loore, Holmes). The point was used for incising, trailing, and in- denting,and among ancient Pueblo plotters was sometimes used upon dark-painted surfaces to develop delicate figures in the light color of the underlying paste. Ex- amples of engraving are given by Boas in ,1888;Fewkesinl7thRep. B. A. E., 1898; Hoffman in Nat. Mus. Rep. 1895, 1897; Holmes (1) in 2d Rep. B. A. E., 1883, (2) in 20th Rep. B. A. E., 1903; Hough in Nat. Mus. Rep., 1901; Moore, various memoirs in Jour. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., x-xir, 1894-1903; Murdoch in 9th Rep. B. A. E., 1892; Nelson in 18th Rep. B. A. E., 1899; Niblack in Rep. Nat. Mus. 1888,1890; Putnam and Willoughby in Proc. A. A. A. 8., xliv, 1896; Turner in 11th Rep. B. A. E., 1894. See Art, Ormniient. (w. h. h.) Enias. A local name for a body of Upper Lillooet on Seton lake, in 1902 re-. duced to a single individual.—Can. Ind. Aff., pt. II, 72, 1902. Enipeu. A Yurok village on Klamath r., Cal., 15 m. above the mouth. Enitunne ('people at the base of a plateau'). A village of the Tututni near the mouth of a southern affluen


Size: 1427px × 1750px
Photo credit: © Library Book Collection / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectethnolo, bookyear1901