no, they make them out of mud, clay and straw. no, they make them out of mud, clay and straw. I think it would be useful to specify which Africans. Africa is a continent. You must specify the country
the fibers of the straw might cause a binding reaction when mixed in clay ..not sure though
there were few stones in the area kkk kool kids klub......we have the awnsers Noob
my guess is: straw, clay, dirt, very fine sand, and gravel
straw and unbaked clay
straw and unbaked clay
you
clay and straw
They used straw and baked it together with their homemade clay to make really hard bricks.
If you're good with your hands, you can make a cube out of one ball of clay,or a cubical frame out of one straw cut into 12 equal pieces.Ohhhh wait ! Now I see what you're driving at. Maybe the little clay balls arewhat you use at the corners to stick the pieces of straw together. OK.You still need 12 pieces of straw all the same length, and then you need eightballs of clay to stick the corners together and make a cube.I apologize for giving you the answer. Now you'll never think it through on your own,and you'll never understand why that's the answer.
Sometimes in the past (and still in some places in the world) bricks were made of straw, mud, and clay. The straw added extra strength or fiber to the brick and gave the mud and clay a better texture to shape a brick out of. You could subsitute straw with hay and make bricks out of that, thus giving you the needed material to lay a old fashioned cobbled or brick street.
adobe bricks made from clay and straw