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Description
Clam-shell beads of the kind here shown are still made by some of the old men. Fragments of shell are pierced and strung on a stem of the scouring-rush (Equisetum), which is then drawn backward and forward on a flat surface of sandstone until the fragments have become nearly circular. The feathered ornament is an ear-pendant, which in this case, because of its length and weight, is attached to a strand of the hair. The large, dark-colored bead on one strand of the necklace is a cylinder of magnesite, a highly valued object.
Photogravure, 18.25 x 22.25 inches: The North American Indian; being a series of volumes picturing and describing the Indians of the United States, and Alaska, 970.6 C942 vol.14 plates, William Smith Mason Collection of Western Americana, Special Collections, Honnold/Mudd Library
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