being of a uniform thickness and easily removed, impressed themselves fully upon the exterior surface of the jar, the plain portions being the impress of the smoothed sides
The probable line of development in pottery-making was then about like this:
1. Made on the outside of a wicker form. Confined chiefly to bowls. 2. Made on the inside of a wicker form. 3. Made on netting in mold hole. 4. Coil-made. 5. Wheel-made, which Indians seem never to have attained.
There was doubtless no sharp line of separation anywhere between these several stages, but they merged into each other as the dawn merges into the day.