From the use of Pottery to the Domestication of Animals in the Eastern Hemisphere : and in the Western to the cultivation of Maize and Plants by irrigation, with the use of adobes and dressed stone in houses. f From the Domestication of animals, III.... Savage Survivals - Page 95by John Howard Moore - 1916 - 191 pagesFull view - About this book
| American Association for the Advancement of Science - Science - 1875 - 962 pages
...Status of Savagery. From the Infancy of the human race to the invention of pottery. f From the use of Pottery to the Domestication of Animals in the Eastern Hemisphere : and in the II. Lower Status of Barbarism. <j Weste,.n to the cuUivation of Maize and Plants by irrigation,... | |
| American Association for the Advancement of Science - Science - 1876 - 582 pages
...Status of Barbarism. ^ From the infancy of the human race to the invention of pottery. From the use of Pottery to the Domestication of Animals in the Eastern Hemisphere : and in the Western to the cultivation of Maize and Plants by irrigation, with the use of adobes and dressed... | |
| American Association for the Advancement of Science - Science - 1876 - 644 pages
...of the human I. Status of Savagery. •( , . * . 1 race to the invention of pottery. f From the use of Pottery to the Domestication of Animals in the Eastern Hemisphere : and in the II. Lower Status of Barbarism. << Wntcn to the cultivatlon of Maize and Plants by irrigation,... | |
| John Wesley Powell - Ethnology - 1881 - 374 pages
...bow and arrow to the invention of the art of pottery. OLDER PERIOD OF BARBARISM. — From a knowledge of pottery to the domestication of animals in the eastern hemisphere, and in the western to the cultivation of maize and plants by irrigation. MIDDLE PERIOD. — From the domestication... | |
| Algie Martin Simons, Charles H. Kerr - American periodicals - 1915 - 802 pages
...of the American Indians were in the stage of Upper Savagery when first found by the white peoples. 4. Lower Barbarism, from the invention of pottery...to realize what hard conditions man has had to pass through in climbing to his present position of luxury and power. The Romans had no sugar. Washington... | |
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