INFLUENCE OF ENVIRONMENT UPON HUMAN INDUSTRIES. 659 



association with aboriginal industries — Continued. 



House and house life. 



Manufactures. 



Insignificant shelters, 

 some under ground; 

 no order in camps; 

 shell heaps, granaries ; 

 fire in doors. 



Under ground, crater, 

 cave, cavate, cliff, 

 mesa, and lowland 

 pueblos ; ladders ; fur- 

 niture and utensils of 

 clay and textiles ; 

 ovens and open fire. 



Thatched and daubed 

 hut, cut- stone build- 

 ings and temples, 

 hammocks, granaries. 



Thatched huts, often 

 daubed or on posts ; 

 hammocks ; no stor- 

 age; chairs from sin- 

 gle block. 



Forti tied villages; 

 thatched huts; bed 

 on the ground; clay 

 dishes; open fire; i 

 llama, dung fuel. 



Excellent stone chip- 

 ping; composite mor- 

 tars; seven styles of 

 basketry ; twine, nets. 



Polishing and boring- 

 stone; smooth, paint- 

 ed pottery ; basketry 

 five kinds, cloth ; wall 

 building; irrigation. 



Stone hammering and 

 chiseling, gem cut- 

 ting, grotesque and 

 painted pottery, pa- 

 per, bark cloth: irri- 

 gation canals. 



No chipping; excellent 

 carved and polished 

 yokes, zemis, etc. ; red 

 pottery, stamped; 

 shellwork and wood 

 carving. 



Hammered stone: huge 

 buildings, little carv- 

 ed; metallurgy; pot- 

 tery modeled ; diago- 

 nal weaving, embroi- 

 dery, quipu. 



Hunting, fishing, war. 



Wooden houses, thatch- Work in wood with 

 ed; sleeping bunks, tools of teeth, bone, 



jouvade. 



and shell. 



Immense huts and she'i- : Pottery, diagonal weav- 



tors. hammocks, cen- ing, agriculture; on 



tral fire, shell heaps, j the waters extensive 



I fishing. 



Sinew-lined bowandex- 

 quisite arrows, fish 

 spears, slat ■ armor, 

 traps. 



Locomotion and trans- 

 portation. 



Poor boats, rafts ; no 



suowshoes ; conical 

 carrying baskets 

 with headband. 



Bows and arrows rude; i On foot only ; carrying 

 throwing clubs; nets I with headband and 

 for birds and rabbits; I toting with head- 

 spears and axes, ring; sandals and 

 moccasins. 



Atlatl and spear, bladed Dugouts, reed floats, 



clubs, obsidian dag- professional carriers 



gers, spears, slings; using headband and 



bows. breastband, wearing 



sandals. 



Clubs, throwing sticks, On foot; sandals of 



sharks' teeth, sword j textile; dugout ca- 



clubs, spears, toma- noes ; headband for 



hawk, or celt in carrying 

 pierced handle. 



Sling, club with or with- 

 out stone or metal 

 head, saber of hard- 

 wood . 



Blowtube, poisoned ar- 

 rows, square sec- 

 tioned bow, dried 

 heads, shields, trident 

 lances, drum signals. 



Hounded bows, deco- 

 rated ; barbed a n d 

 bladed arrows. 



Afoot; log and reed 

 balsas; carrying on 

 men and llamas ; sus- 

 p ens ion bridges; 

 couriers. 



Afoot little; canoes of 

 bark: headband in 

 carrying. 



Travel afoot; canoes 

 and house boats. 



