While we know our northern friends may not feel it, in the South, Spring is
here. So we thought we'd share a few of our gardening sites appropriate
for this time of the year. Along with gardening, there's grilling, and getting
ready to diet so that you can fit back into that bathing suit this summer!
Fire-making. Two methods of making fire were in use
among the American aborigines at the time of the discovery. The first method, by
flint-and-pyrites (the progenitor of flint-and-steel ) , was practised by the
Eskimo and by the northern Athapascan and Algonquian tribes ranging across the
continent from Stikine r. in Alaska to Newfoundland and around the entire Arctic
coast, and also through out New England; as well as by the tribes of the N.
Pacific coast. The inference is that this method of fire-making at one time was
general in this area, but the observations on which its distribution is based
are from widely separated localities in which it is invariably used in
connection with fire-making by wood friction. It appears probable that
flint-and-pyrites, in view of its distribution in northern Europe, was
introduced into America through Scandinavian contact, or is ac-cultural either
from Europe or Asia. The flint-and-steel is clearly an introduction of recent
times.
The second method, by reciprocating motion of wood on wood and igniting the
ground-off particles through heat generated by friction, was widespread in
America, where it was the most valued as well as the most effectual process
known to the aborigines. The apparatus, in its simplest form, consists of a
slender rod or drill and a lower piece or hearth, near the border of which the
drill is worked by twisting between the palms, cutting a socket. From the socket
a narrow canal is cut in the edge of the hearth, the function of which is to
collect the powdered wood ground off by the friction of the drill, as within
this wood meal the heat rises to the ignition point. This is the simplest and
most widely diffused type of fire-generating apparatus known to uncivilized man.
Among the Eskimo and some other tribes the simple two-piece fire drill became a
machine by the use of a hand or mouth rest containing a stone, bone, or wood
socket for the upper end of the drill, and a cord with two handles or string on
a bow for revolving the drill. By these inventions uniform and rapid motion and
great pressure were effected, rendering it possible to make fire with inferior
wood. The four- part drill consisted of two kinds: (a) The cord drill, which
requires the cooperation of two persons in its working, and (b) the bow drill,
which enables one person to make fire or to drill bone and ivory. The
distribution of these varieties, which are confined to the Eskimo and their
neighbors, follows no regular order; they may be used together in the same
tribe, or one or the other may be used alone, although the presumption is that
the cord drill is the older. The hearth alone embodies two interesting
modifications which reflect the environment. In one the canal leads down to a
step or projection from the side of the hearth, and in the other the drilling is
done on a longitudinal slot in the mi Idle of the hearth, the object in both css
being to prevent the fire from falling into the snow. These features also seem
to have an indiscriminate distribution in the area mentioned.
The pump drill has been employed for fire-making only among the Onondaga of
Canada, who used it in making sacred fire for the White-dog feast; but the pump
drill is of little practical use in fire-making. From the Onondaga also there is
an example of the fire plow like that of the Polynesians, in which a stick is
held at an angle between the hands and rubbed back and forth along a plane
surface, cutting a groove in which the wood meal produced by friction ignites.
The appearance of these diverse methods in one tribe, in an area where the
simple drill was common, leads to the assumption that they are of recent
introduction. There is no other evidence that the fire plow ever existed in the
western hemi sphere.
The wood selected for the fire drill varied in different localities, the proper
kinds and qualities being a matter of acquired knowledge. Thus the weathered
roots of the cotton wood were used by the Pueblos; the stems of the yucca by the
Apache; the root of the willow by the Hupa and Klamath; cedar by the N. W. coast
tribes; elm, maple, and button wood by the eastern Indians. In some instances
sand was placed in the fire cavity to in crease friction; often two men twirled
the drill alternately for the purpose of saving labor or when the wood was
intractable.
A similar discrimination is observed in the selection of tinder. The Eskimo
prized willow catkins; the Indians of the N. AV. coast used frayed cedar bark;
other tribes used fungi, softened bark, grass, or other ignitable material.
Touchwood or punk for preserving fire was obtained from decayed trees, or some
form of slow match was prepared from bark. From the striking of a spark to the
well-started campfire considerable skill and fore thought were required. The
glowing coal from the fire drill was usually made to fall into a small heap of
easily ignitable material, where it was encouraged by fanning or blowing until
actual flame was produced; or the spark with the small kind ling was gathered in
a bunch of grass or a strip of bark and swung in the air.
Fire-making formed an important feature of a number of ceremonies. New fire was
made in the Green-corn ceremony of the Creeks (see Busk], the White-dog feast of
the Iroquois, the New-fire and Yaya ceremonies of the Hopi, and among many other
tribes in widely separated localities. There are also many legends and myths
grouped about the primitive method of obtaining fire at will. The Cherokee and
other southern tribes believed that a perpetual fire burned beneath some of the
mounds in their country, and the Natchez built their mounds with a view, it is
said, of maintaining a perpetual fire. On the introduction of flint-and-steel
and matches the art of fire making by the old methods speedily fell into disuse
among most tribes and was perpetuated only for procuring the new fire demanded
by religious rites. See Drills and Drilling, Illumination.
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includes some historical materials that may imply negative stereotypes
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Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico, Frederick Webb Hodge, 1906