Creek Pottery

Quail Creek Pottery The Barn …Intro
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VINTAGE BEAVER CREEK 1996 BUD VASE POTTERY STONEWARE CERAMIC BELVIDERE ILLINOIS $9.99 |
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*3* Swift Creek Design – Florida Indian Pottery – Florida Artifacts/Fossils $9.99 |
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Swift Creek – Florida Indian Pottery – Florida Artifacts/Fossils $5.00 |
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Emerson Creek Pottery Pitcher–Blue and White Flowers–Green Foilage–8″–Heavy $5.99 |
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Emerson Creek Pottery Plate–Blue and White Flowers–Green Foilage–10 1/2″-Nice $5.99 |
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Anasazi / Mogollon Pottery – Cedar Creek Polychrome Bowl $495.00 |
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Vintage Cauldron Copper Rust Orange Drip Glaze Creek Pottery Vase $17.75 |
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Emerson Creek Pottery, Handcrafted, White with Wine Red Floral Design $5.00 |
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2001 NORTH CAROLINA LICK CREEK POTTERY GREEN HANDLED CUP PITCHER $12.50 |
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VINTAGE BASIN CREEK POTTERY ECKMAN SIGNED STEIN CUP MUG $12.75 |
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FLORAL EMERSON CREEK POTTERY L VASE MADE IN BEDFORD VIRGINIA $9.99 |
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FLORAL EMERSON CREEK POTTERY VASE MADE IN BEDFORD VIRGINIA $9.99 |
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Vintage Jackson China Art Pottery platter Falls Creek plate Pink Restaurant Ware $9.99 |
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Emerson Creek Pottery Bedford VA potpourri bowl sachet flowers jar w/ cork lid $9.95 |
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VINTAGE LEFT HANDED RUSSELL HENRY POTTERY CANDLEHOLDER HAY CREEK PA – 1971 $49.99 |
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Emerson Creek Pottery Coffee Mug Cup Pansies Pansy $6.99 |
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Singed Double Creek Pottery Florida Lady Head & Figure Wine Cooler or Vase $21.99 |
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Basin Creek Montana Studio Art Pottery Dinnerware 7 1/2″ Bowl Bar D Ranch Rustic $9.99 |
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Turtle Creek Potters Cathy Gatch Redware Pitcher 1985 $22.00 |
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“Built of Barnwood” featured Swan Creek Vintage Pottery Candle – Ivory/Tan $4.50 |
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“Built of Barnwood” featured Swan Creek Vintage Pottery Candle – Caramel Brown $4.50 |
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VINTAGE CREEK NATIVE AMERICAN INDIAN “TURTLE CLAN” POTTERY MUG $24.95 |
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Emerson Creek Pottery Bedford Virginia Small Serving Tray Lead Free Handpainted $8.99 |
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Emerson Creek Pottery Bedford Virginia Small Plate Lead Free Handpainted New $8.99 |
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Emerson Creek Pottery Bedford Virginia Small Plate Lead Free Handpainted New $8.99 |
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Emerson Creek Pottery Bedford Virginia 1991 Iris Flower Vase Hand Painted $4.99 |
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Emerson Creek Pottery VA PITCHER w/Purple Flowers $12.00 |
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Vintage Peerage Brass/Ceramic Sugar Creek Bridge ~ Wheeling Pottery ~ England ~ $17.50 |
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Duck Creek Pottery NC Sylvia Coppola Signed Plates 2000 $24.95 |
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MANCOS CREEK COLORADO TRADING POST ~ NAVAJO POTTERY BOWL $34.99 |
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The Story of Driving Creek – Potteries Railway Brickworks and Native Forest and Restoration Project … |
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Mill Creek Pottery … |
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Late Woodland and Mississippian Occupations in the Hadley and McCraney Creek Valleys of West-Central Illinois (Transportation Archaeological Research Reports) $20.00 This report presents the results of excavations of six sites in the valleys of two tributaries to the Mississippi River in west-central Illinois. Five of the sites-Hadley Creek South and North, Barcam, Barabell, and Tickless-were closely spaced in Hadley Creek valley. The Schuhardt site was located several kilometers north in the McCraney Creek valley. Except for a few artifacts, material remains … |
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Swan Creek 9 Oz. 100% Soy Wax 45+ Hour Round Pottery Candle Citrus & Sage $14.00 100% Soy Wax Candle… |
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Pottery $66.91 High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles Pottery is the ceramic ware made by potters. Major types of pottery include earthenware, stoneware, and porcelain. The places where such wares are made are called potteries. Pottery is one of the oldest human technologies and artforms, and remains a major industry today. Ceramic art covers the art of pottery, whether in items made for use or purely for decoration. Pottery is made by forming a clay body into objects of a required shape and heating them to high temperatures in a kiln to induce reactions that lead to permanent changes, including increasing their strength and hardening and setting their shape. Author: Surhone, Lambert M./ Timpledon, Miriam T./ Marseken, Susan F. Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 76 Publication Date: 2010/05/19 Language: English Dimensions: 5.98 x 9.01 x 0.18 inches |
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Bottle Creek $30 This is the first comprehensive study and analysis of the most important Mississippian mound site on the north-central Gulf coast. Consisting of 18 earthen mounds and numerous additional habitation areas dating to A.D. 1250-1550, the Bottle Creek site was first professionally investigated in 1932 when David L. DeJarnette of the Alabama Museum of Natural History began work there to determine if the site had a cultural relationship with Moundville, connected to the north by a river system. Although partially mapped in the 1880s, Bottle Creek’s location in the vast Mobile-Tensaw Delta of Baldwin County completely surrounded by swamp made it inaccessible and protected it from most of the plunder experienced by similar sites in the Southeast. This volume builds on earlier investigations to present extensive recent data from major excavations conducted from 1991 to 1994 and supported in part by an NEH grant. Ten anthropologists examine various aspects of the site, including mound architecture, prehistoric diet, pottery classification, vessel forms, textiles used to make pottery impressions, a microlithic stone tool industry, water travel, the persistence of mound use into historic times, and the position of Bottle Creek in the protohistoric world. The site is concluded to be the best remaining example of Pensacola culture, an archaeological variant of the widespread Mississippian tradition identified by a shell-tempered pottery complex and by its geographic association with the north-central coast of the Gulf of Mexico. Occupied for three centuries by a thriving native culture, Bottle Creek is an important remnant of North American peoples and as such is designated a National Historic Landmark. This published compilation of the research data should establish a base for future scholarly investigation and interpretation. Ian W. Brown is Professor of Anthropology at The University of Alabama and Curator of Gulf Coast Archaeology at the Alabama Museum of Natural History. He has numerous publications, including Decorated Pottery of the Lower Mississippi Valley: A Sorting Manual. David S. Brose is Director of the Schiele Museum of Natural History in North Carolina and coeditor of The Northwest Florida Expeditions of Clarence Bloomfield Moore and Societies in Eclipse. |
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Pottery Workers $24.99 Pottery Workers – Photographic Print |
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Pottery Objects $39.99 Pottery Objects – Giclee Print |
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Acoma Pottery $24.99 Acoma Pottery – Premium Poster |
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Pottery Merchants $24.99 Pottery Merchants – Photographic Print |
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Pottery I $9.99 Pottery I – Art Print |
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Pottery II $9.99 Pottery II – Art Print |
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Pottery III $9.99 Pottery III – Art Print |
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Pottery IV $9.99 Pottery IV – Art Print |
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Decorative Pottery $29.99 Decorative Pottery – Photographic Print |
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A Pottery Factory $24.99 A Pottery Factory – Photographic Print |
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Pottery Wheel $24.99 Pottery Wheel – Photographic Print |
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Poole Pottery $24.99 Poole Pottery – Photographic Print |
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Wedgwood Pottery $24.99 Wedgwood Pottery – Photographic Print |
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Pottery Painters $24.99 Pottery Painters – Premium Poster |
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Finished Pottery $79.99 Finished Pottery – Premium Photographic Print |
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Greek Pottery $34.99 Payne Greek Pottery – Giclee Print |
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Southwestern Pottery – Allan Hayes – Paperback $16.02 Southwestern Pottery |
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Pottery Basics – Jacqui Atkin – Hardcover $16.31 Pottery Basics |
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Indian Pottery – Toni Roller – Paperback $12.95 Indian Pottery |
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Charming Pottery $54.99 Karsten Kirchner Charming Pottery – Framed Art Print |
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African American History in North Carolina: History of North Carolina, St. Paul A.m.e. Church (Raleigh, North Carolina), Pope House Museum $10 Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Excerpt: The earliest discovered human settlements in what eventually became North Carolina are found at the Hardaway Site near the town of Badin in the south-central part of the state. Radiocarbon dating of the site has not been possible. However, based on other dating methods, such as rock strata and the existence of Dalton-type spear points, the site has been dated to approximately 8000 BC. Spearpoints of the Dalton type continued to change and evolve slowly for the next 7000 years, suggesting a continuity of culture for most of that time. During this time, settlement was scattered and likely existed solely on the hunter-gatherer level. Towards the end of this period, there is evidence of settled agriculture, such as plant domestication and the development of pottery. From 1000 BC until the time of European settlement marks a time period known as the “Woodland period”. Permanent villages, based on settled agriculture, existed throughout the state. By about 800 AD, fortified towns appeared throughout the Piedmont region, suggesting the existence of organized tribal warfare. An important site of this late-Woodland period is the Town Creek Indian Mound, an archaeologically rich location occupied by the Pee Dee culture of the Mississippian tradition. Map of North America by Vesconte Maggiolo after an earlier map made on the Verrazzano expedition of 1524. The narrow isthmus of land separating “Tera Florida” from “Francesca” is the Outer Banks of North Carolina. Cape Fear is labeled “C. de la Foresto”.The earliest exploration of North Carolina by a European expedition is likely that of Giovanni da Verrazzano in 1524. An Italian from Florence, Verrazzano was hired by French merchants in order to procure a sea route to bring silk to the city of Lyon. With… More: |
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Art Galleries in Michigan: Bohemian National Home, Pewabic Pottery, Park West Gallery, Gertrude Kasle Gallery, Scarab Club $10.55 Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: Bohemian National Home, Pewabic Pottery, Park West Gallery, Gertrude Kasle Gallery, Scarab Club, Contemporary Art Institute of Detroit, Basement 414, Redd Apple Gallery. Excerpt: Basement 414 is a venue for various forms of artistic expression located in Lansing, Michigan . The venue hosts a variety of art exhibitions of any medium including paintings , musical acts, video and performance art , and other crafts including things such as napkin art. Artists such as Andrew W.K. and the Peppermint Creek Theatre Company , among others, have performed there. References (URLs online) Websites (URLs online) Coordinates : 42°43 59 N 84°32 49 W / 42.733°N 84.547°W / 42.733; -84.547 A hyperlinked version of this chapter is at Bohemian National Home on Tillman The Original Bohemian Period of the Bohemian National Home (1914-1962) The Bohemian National Home is a historic building in Detroit, Michigan . The massive brick building sits at the corner of Tillman Avenue and Butternut Street in the residential section adjacent to the three thousand block of Michigan Avenue. The building is an imposing presence in the neighbhorhood of small, late nineteenth century houses and cottages, measuring seventy feet on Tillman and one hundred feet on Butternut. The design of the structure is urban and pedestrian friendly, with no setback from the sidewalk and double door entrances on both Tillman and Butternut. A review of Sanborn Insurance maps from the time period shows that the building was originally built without a parking lot, indicating a pedestrian connection with the surrounding neighborhood. According to the building permit issued March 20, 1914, the Bohemian National Home (Cesky Norodni Dum, as written in stone on the front of the building) was built by a group |
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Asheville $21.99 Native American tribes, including Cherokee, Creek, and Shawano, passed through Asheville and Western North Carolina, building towns and villages along the banks of the Swannanoa and French Broad Rivers for more than 1,000 years. The first white settlers arrived in the Swannanoa Valley in October of 1784. After the Civil War, Asheville became a haven for the wealthy elite of Charleston and Philadelphia; as the resort era blossomed, so too did Asheville. Second only to Miami in its treasure trove of Art Deco landmarks, Asheville is an architectural and historical time capsule of national significance. It is a community with a rich heritage and history in the arts, including textiles, pottery, and modernist art. Today Asheville is at a crossroads; attempting to balance the environmental and natural attractions of the area with commercial development is and will be one of Asheville’s greatest challenges. |
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Asheville, North Carolina (Images of America Series) $21.99 Native American tribes, including Cherokee, Creek, and Shawano, passed through Asheville and Western North Carolina, building towns and villages along the banks of the Swannanoa and French Broad Rivers for more than 1,000 years. The first white settlers arrived in the Swannanoa Valley in October of 1784. After the Civil War, Asheville became a haven for the wealthy elite of Charleston and Philadelphia; as the resort era blossomed, so too did Asheville. Second only to Miami in its treasure trove of Art Deco landmarks, Asheville is an architectural and historical time capsule of national significance. It is a community with a rich heritage and history in the arts, including textiles, pottery, and modernist art. Today Asheville is at a crossroads; attempting to balance the environmental and natural attractions of the area with commercial development is and will be one of Asheville’s greatest challenges. |
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Cambridge $21.99 Nestled among the foothills of eastern Ohio, historic Cambridge sits on a bluff overlooking the meandering Wills Creek. The National Road, the first federally funded interstate road, serves as its main street and has shaped its identity, character, and economy. The first legal bridge in the Northwest Territory spanned Wills Creek here in 1802, along Ebenezer Zane’s narrow trace, which preceded the National Road. In the decades before the Civil War, the city thrived, serving travelers along this important thoroughfare; later Cambridge became a regional center for the coal, glass, and pottery industries. The arrival of the interstate system in the 1960s and the nearby construction of the largest interchange in the world at the time (connecting Interstates 70 and 77) rendered Cambridge’s busy main street a sleepier place but one insulated from the off-ramp culture the interstate system spawned. Today Cambridge’s historic downtown has undergone a remarkable revitalization, and this town of 11,000 is an American jewel. Cambridge celebrates the heritage of this town and offers glimpses into the lives, labor, and leisure of its residents. |
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Cambridge, Ohio (Images of America Series) $21.99 Nestled among the foothills of eastern Ohio, historic Cambridge sits on a bluff overlooking the meandering Wills Creek. The National Road, the first federally funded interstate road, serves as its main street and has shapedits identity, character, and economy. The first legal bridge in the Northwest Territory spanned Wills Creek here in 1802, along Ebenezer Zane’s narrow trace, which preceded the National Road. In the decades before the Civil War, the city thrived, serving travelers along this important thoroughfare; later Cambridge became a regional center for the coal, glass, and pottery industries. The arrival of the interstate system in the 1960s and the nearby construction of the largest interchange in the world at the time (connecting Interstates 70 and 77) rendered Cambridge’s busy main street a sleepier place but one insulated from the off-ramp culture the interstate system spawned. Today Cambridge’s historic downtown has undergone a remarkable revitalization, and this town of 11,000 is an American jewel.Cambridge celebrates the heritage of this town and offers glimpses into the lives, labor, and leisure of its residents. |
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Goodhue County, Minnesota: Minnesota, Cannon Falls, Minnesota, Vasa Township, Cherry Grove Township, Pine Island Township, Goodhue Township $26.81 Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: Minnesota, Cannon Falls, Minnesota, Vasa Township, Cherry Grove Township, Pine Island Township, Goodhue Township, Belle Creek Township, Wacouta Township, Warsaw Township, Cannon Falls Township, Zumbrota, Minnesota, Zumbrota Township, Red Wing, Minnesota, Kenyon, Minnesota, Welch Township, Goodhue, Minnesota, Belvidere Township, Wanamingo, Minnesota, Hay Creek Township, Minneola Township, Wanamingo Township, Kenyon Township, Featherstone Township, Roscoe Township, Florence Township, Leon Township, Bellechester, Minnesota, Dennison, Minnesota, Holden Township, Stanton Township, Lake City, Minnesota, Pine Island, Minnesota, National Register of Historic Places Listings in Goodhue County, Minnesota, Frontenac State Park, Frontenac, Minnesota, Prairie Island Nuclear Power Plant, Cannon River, Lake Pepin, County Roads in Goodhue County, Minnesota, E. S. Hoyt House, Red Wing Pottery, Stanton Airfield, Sea Wing Disaster, St. James Hotel (Red Wing, Minnesota), James L. Lawther House, Red Wing Seminary, Welch Village, Dammon Round Barn, Goodhue Pioneer State Trail, Zumbrota Covered Bridge, Prairie Island Indian Community, Red Wing, Chicago Great Western Depot, Stanton, Minnesota, Fort Beauharnois, Riedell Skates, Lock and Dam No. 3, Burnside Township, Hay Creek, Eggleston, Minnesota, Ryan, Minnesota, East Red Wing, Minnesota, Hader, Minnesota. Excerpt: Bellechester is a city in Goodhue and Wabasha counties in the U.S. state of Minnesota . The population was 172 at the 2000 census. Most of Bellchester is in Goodhue County, with only a small part extending into Wabasha County .Geography According to the United States Census Bureau , the city has a total area of 0.3 square miles (0.8 km² ), all land.Demographics As of the census of 2000, there were 172 people, 78 households, |
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Of Marshes and Maize: Preceramic Agricultural Settlement in the Cienega Valley, Southeastern Arizona $9.6 While it was once believed that agriculture and pottery developed concurrently in prehistoric societies, modern research has concluded that agriculture preceded pottery making, since a sedentary life with greater food production led to both the need and time to create storage containers.Bruce Huckell has been at the forefront of a movement in Arizona archaeology that has greatly modified our understanding of the transition from the Archaic to the agricultural periods in the Southwest. Work done by Huckell and others at Matty Canyon has produced the most detailed account available of a Late Archaic village and has been extremely influential in suggesting that the cultivation of maize predated the appearance of pottery.Of Marshes and Maize presents archaeological information obtained from small-scale investigations at two deeply buried preceramic sites in the Cienega Creek Basin. Its report on excavations at the Donaldson Site and at Los Ojitos offers a thorough description of archaeological features and artifacts, floral and faunal remains, and their geological and chronological contexts. From this data, the author concludes that a major shift toward a sedentary lifeway dependent on maize agriculture had already occurred by Late Archaic times (c. 500 to 800 B.C.), demonstrating that previous research on late preceramic sites in this region has provided an inadequate picture of the period.This monograph represents the first full presentation in the literature of an important set of data that is well-known among researchers but has thus far not been easily accessible. It is a classic example of the use of fragmentary evidence in well-dated contexts to introduce new ideas, and will stand not only as an important record of the evidence but also as the primary reference for this significant new interpretation of the late Archaic and the introduction of agriculture into the Southwest.Bruce B. Huckell is senior research coordinator with the |
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Round Pottery Votive Candle Holder Set Home Decor – Swan Creek – 731975194677 $12 Round Pottery Votive Candle Holder Set Home Decor – Swan Creek – 731975194677 |
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The Potter’s Cat $11.43 The Potter’s Cat is a delightful children’s story that will entertain and teach valuable lessons on life and living. The story begins with an acorn that sprouts near a small creek in the hill country of Texas. The little acorn soon grows into a fully grown oak tree. From there, the story develops into an inspirational tale describing the many events and the history that take place in and around the area. The Potter’s Cat is filled with beautiful descriptions, insights and humor, and is a sweet tale of companionship. As life unfolds around the hill country, a potter buys a building near the oak tree and makes it into his studio. One day as he is out under the tree working his clay, he finds a small, tailless calico kitten. He takes the kitten in and names her Shards. The two become inseparable and Shards even decorates some of his pottery!The Potter’s Cat expresses the love between man and animal, and how pets can become our dearest friends and bring hours of pleasure and laughter.Author Peg Davis is a retired school teacher who spends her spare time writing. She loves to travel, read and sew, and resides in Lubbock, Texas.Publisher’s website: http://www.strategicpublishinggroup.com/title/ThePottersCat.html |