Twined. Tag "Nongatl". Per Ralph Shanks: Twined cooking basket, used, with food residue. The materials are willow warps with a conifer root weft and a beargrass overlay. There is some broken cordage near the rim. There is a crossed warp starting knot. Beginning at the starting knot there is 3/4 inch of three strand twining, followed by 2 3/4 inches of plain twining, followed by a single weft row of three strand twining, followed by one weft row of plain twining, followed by one weft row of three strand twining. This is followed by 1 inch of plain twining followed by one weft row of three strand twining, followed by one weft row of plain twining, followed by one weft row of three strand twining. Plain twining continues to 3/4 of an inch from the rim, where there is one weft row of three strand twining, followed by one weft row of plain twining, followed by one weft row of three strand twining. Plain twining continues to the rim. The rim is trimmed. The main overlay design is a horizontal band of alternating beargrass open squares and closed rectangles. The slant of weft twist is up to the right, with a rightward work direction. The basket has an exterior workface. The surface undulates.
Donor:
Gladys Ayer Nomland and University Appropriation
Collection place:
16-18 miles above Blue Lake, Mad River, Humboldt County
Verbatim coll. place:
California; Mad River; Upper Mad River
Culture or time period:
Nongatl
Collector:
Gladys Ayer Nomland, Minnie Pete, and Will Taggitt
Collection date:
July 1931
Object type:
ethnography
Object class:
Cooking baskets and Twined weaving
Function:
1.5 Household
Accession date:
1931
Context of use:
Cooking basket.
Department:
Native California (archaeology and ethnology)
Dimensions:
diameter 27.8 centimeters and height 17.7 centimeters