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Basket weaving (or '''basket making''', '''basketry''', or '''basketmaking''') is the process of Weaving unspun Vegetable Fiber s into a Basket . People with the Profession of weaving baskets are '''basketmakers'''. Erdly reports that the oldest known baskets are (according to Radiocarbon Dating ) between 10,000 and 12,000 years old, earlier than any established dates for Archeological finds of Pottery , and were discovered in Faiyum in upper Egypt . Other baskets have been discovered in the Middle East that are up to 7,000 years old. However, baskets seldom survive, as they are made from perishable materials. The most common evidence of a knowledge of basketry is an imprint of the weave on fragments of clay pots, formed by packing clay on the walls of the basket and firing. Erdly classifies basketry into five types:
Basket weaving utilizes stakes or spokes and weavers. Stakes/spokes usually form the bottom of the basket and become the vertical framework for the basket sides. Round baskets have spokes; other shapes have stakes (Nantucket baskets use the term "staves"). The weavers fill in the sides of a basket. The parts of a basket are the base, the side walls, and the rim. A basket may also have a lid, handle, or embellishments. NATIVE AMERICAN BASKET WEAVING Tribes made their baskets from the materials available locally. Native Americans in New England wove their baskets from Swamp Ash . The wood would be peeled off the felled Log in strips, following the Growth Ring s of the tree. They also wove baskets from sweetgrass. Northwestern tribes used spruce root, cedar bark, and swampgrass. Southeastern tribes like the Cherokee used bundled pine needles. Southwestern tribes coiled baskets from sumac, yucca, and willow. Birchbark was used by Northern tribes like the Dene . Birchbark baskets are often embellished with dyed porcupine quills. REFERENCES |