Pre-Columbian pottery was built mostly with coiling techniques, rather than the potter's wheel of the Old World. It was fired directly under a heap of slow-burning fuel rather than a kiln.
- Powdered clay (right), and grit temper (left).
- Mixing the wet ingredients with a pounder.
- Forming a pinch pot for the base.
- Adding the first coil.
- Smoothing coils with a shell.
- Beating coils together with a cord-wrapped paddle.
- Decorating the pot rim with incised designs.
- Bob with his finely-crafted pot.
- Starting a friction fire with hand drill.
- Pre-heating the pots, rim first.
- More pre-heating.
- Note the change in color as free water is driven out of the clay.
- Pots turned upside-down on stone pedestals.
- Placing bark fuel around the pot. Rear pot has already fired up.
- Both pots firing away.
- Emerging from the ashes in one piece!
- Three finished pots of Eastern Woodland design.
- Pot and dishes made from red clay (which has very high iron-oxide content).
- Southwest style pot.
- More Southwest pottery.