North American Indians of the Plains . Fig. 30. Boiling with Hot Stones in a Paunch supported by These methods were known to the Arapaho, Crow,Dakota, Gros Ventre, Blackfoot, and they were generally practised elsewhere in 76 INDIANS OF THE PLAIN ^ the Plains. Since California and the whole Pacificcoast northward as well as the interior plateaus hadstone-boiling as a general cultural trait, this distribu-tion in the Plains is easily accounted for. On the otherhand, the eastern United State- appears as :i greatpottery area whose influence reached the Villag


North American Indians of the Plains . Fig. 30. Boiling with Hot Stones in a Paunch supported by These methods were known to the Arapaho, Crow,Dakota, Gros Ventre, Blackfoot, and they were generally practised elsewhere in 76 INDIANS OF THE PLAIN ^ the Plains. Since California and the whole Pacificcoast northward as well as the interior plateaus hadstone-boiling as a general cultural trait, this distribu-tion in the Plains is easily accounted for. On the otherhand, the eastern United State- appears as :i greatpottery area whose influence reached the Village excepting the pottery-making Village tribes,themethods of cooking in the Plains area before trader-introduced kettles seem to have comprised broilingover the fire, baking in holes in the ground, and boilingin vessels of skin, basketry, or bark. For the first,


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectindiansofnorthameric