298 



POTTEBY 



[b. a. b. 



ANCIENT PUEBLO COILED WARE. 



absence of pottery from the Pacific states 

 and British Columbia is noteworthy. 

 The few rude vessels found in central and 

 southern C a 1 i - 

 fornia are be- 

 lieved to be of 

 somewhat late 

 origin, and may 

 ])e due to the 

 influence of the 

 Pueblo tribes 

 on the E. The 

 principal earth- 

 en relics of well- 

 determined an- 

 tiquity are clay 

 pellets, probab- 

 ly intended for 

 use in slings, labret-hke forms, beads, 

 etc., obtained from mounds in the San 

 Joaquin valley 

 (Holmes). Ac- 

 cordingtoCulin, 

 clay pellets are 

 still used by the 

 Pomo with the 

 sling for hunting 

 birds. The early 

 and very general 

 use of basketry 

 and of stone ves- 

 sels in this re- 

 gion may have 

 oi^erated to re- 

 tard the devel- 

 opment of the potter's art. N. of the 

 Canadian boundary conditions were not 

 favorable to the 

 development of 

 this art, al- 

 though s p e c i - 

 mens of rude 

 earthenware are 

 obtained from 

 m o u n d s a n d 

 other sites in 

 New Brunswick 

 ( Matthew and 

 K a i n ) , the 

 Lakes j^rovinces 

 ( B o yl e ) , the 

 Ked r. country (Montgomery), and in 

 Alaska as far as Pt Barrow (Murdoch). 

 Nelson describes the 

 manufacture of pot- 

 tery at St Michael, 

 on Norton sd., and 

 Hough mentions the 

 occurrence of earth- 

 enware lamps in the 

 Yukon valley and on 

 St Lawrence id. See 

 Art, Ornament. 

 Consult Abbott 

 Prim. Indus., 1881 

 Ann. Arch;«ol. Reps. Ontario, 1888-1907 

 Beauchamp in Bull. N. Y. State Mus. 



MOUND WARE, NORTH Carolina. CORD and NET DECORATION. 

 4? m. ; ;>, HEIGHTS? IN. 



IROQUOIS, PENNSYLVANIA 



Cushing in 4th Rep. B. A. E., 1886; Del- 

 lenbaugh, North Americans of Yester- 

 day, 1901; Evers in Cent. St Louis Acad. 

 Sci., pt. I, 1880; 

 Fewkes (1) in 

 17th Rep. B. A. 

 E., 1898, (2) in 

 22d Rep. B. A. 

 E., 1903; Foster, 

 Prehist. Races, 

 1878; Fowke, 

 Archseol. Hist. 

 Ohio, 1902; Har- 

 rington in Am. 

 Anthrop., x, no. 

 J, 4, 1908; Harri- 



a, HEIGHT ,2 ,N.; ;., HEIGHT e ,N. SOU in Proc. and 

 Coll. Wyoming 

 Hist, and Geol. Soc, 1886; Holmes (1) 

 in Bull. Geog. and Geol. Surv. Terr., ii, 

 no. 1, 1876, (2) 

 in 3d Rep. B. A. 

 E., 1884, (3) in 

 4th Rep. B. A. 

 E., 1886, (4) in 

 20th Rep. B. A. 

 E.,1903; Hough 

 in Rep. Nat. 

 Mus. 1901, 1902; 

 C. C. Jones, 

 Antiq. So. Inds., 

 1873; J. Jones in 

 S m i t h s n . 

 Cont., XXII, 

 1876; Matthew 

 Hist. Soc. New Brunswick, 

 Matthew and Kain, ibid., 

 V, no. 23, 1905; 

 Mills in Ohio 

 Archseol. and 

 Hist. Quar., 

 XIII, no. 2, 1904; 

 Moore, 

 reports 



plorations, in 

 Jour. Acad. Nat. 

 Sci. Phila., 

 1 894-1 908; 

 M o o r e h e a d , 

 Prehist. Impls., 

 1900; Morgan, 

 Murdoch in 11th 



in Bull. Nat. 

 no. 3, 1884; 



^?V^. 



various 

 on ex- 



IROQUOIS, VERMONT 



League Iroq., 1904; 



ESKIMO, ALASKA. (nELSOn) 



ANCIENT HOPI POLYCHROME WARE 



Rep. B. A. E., 1894; Nelson in 18th Rep. 



