[43] G. J. French, An Attempt, etc., 1858.

[44] Charles Rau, “Indian Pottery,” Smithsonian Report, 1866, p. 346, and 1882, p. 49.

[45] W. H. Holmes, “Origin and Development of Form and Ornament in Ceramic Art,” Fourth Ann. Rep. Bureau Ethnol. Washington, 1886.

[46] Cf. p. [334], which is an abstract of what that author says.

[47] C. Fellows, A Journal written during an Excursion in Asia Minor, 1839.

[48] A remarkable example of inappropriate skeuomorphic decoration occurs among some of the tribes of Central Brazil, where the small triangular covering of the women is copied and made into patterns (Fig. [52]) on various objects, some being on the bark tablets which run as a frieze round a chief’s house (pp. [97], [175]).

[49] φυσικός—of or concerning the order of external nature; natural, physical.

[50] A Study of Pueblo Pottery, etc., 1886.

[51] “A few Summer Ceremonials at the Tusayan Pueblos,” Journal of American Ethnology and Archæology, ii., 1892.

[52] Maize or Indian corn.