*This is a Carson red swastika swirl on buff American Indian water bottle. This water bottle was plowed up by the farmer who owned the farm and later the rain washed the dirt away and I found it as I walked the site of the Indian village looking for arrow heads. It is a late Mississippian period pot from somewhere around 1500 to 1600 AD. The red paint is made from Iron oxide and animal fat. The design swirls around the pot and meets on three sides, not an easy design to create this well.
Not bad for something buried for over 500 years.*
American Indian archeology has been divided into basically four time periods by archeologists – The Paleo Period – Prehistoric to 20,000 years BC – Archaic Period – 20,000 to 10,000 years BC – Woodland Period 10,000 BC to 1000 AD and the Mississippian Period – 1000 AD to 1600 AD
The Paleo period was primarily found in the American southwest because of the cold that existed over much of the north part of America at that time. The later Paleo and other periods spread across the entire continent.
The woodland period was when the Indians started growing crops and staying in one location instead of traveling and hunting all the time. Their stone work was of a much poorer quality but they started making pottery from clay. They tempered their pottery with sand so it didn’t last like the later period pottery did.
During the Mississippian period the American Indians began to come together into tribes from their former existence as extended family groups.
Nikon D40X on auto in studio set up.
264 Views as of 10/10/11
indian, artifact, clay pottery, american indian, byron snider
Comments
What an awesome find…a museum would kill to have this!!! Thanks Prof. for the history, learn something new everyday!!!
WOW this is a great find and an equally great shot =0)
This is Awesome! I love the history! Great Shot!
fabulous byron my friend!!
lovely piece and interesting description byron :)
its fabulous byron!
This bottle has such wonderful paint work on it
stunning
breathtaking!
Fantastic! I just landed my first professional job as a product photographer, and poeple say it’s so hard and expensive to make quality shots like this. I say, with a good eye, and some basic equipment, you get what you have. You have created simple beauty by letting the subject speak for itself.
I use a small portable studio, a piece of 10 gauge aluminum bent at a right angel, with a black backdrop and a macro light, not hard, at least I don’t think it is. Thank you Bud
– barnsis