yahay kaayo mo no!
The Plains Indians used the gall bladder of a buffalo to make yellow paint. They would mix the bile from the gall bladder with other natural materials to create the yellow pigment for their artwork and decorations.
yahay kaayo mo no!
yahay kaayo mo no!
None. Flowers, berries, and other natural items were used.
Yellow paint typically does not come from any organ of a buffalo. Yellow paint is usually made by mixing various pigments or dyes to achieve the desired color. It is not derived directly from any specific organ of an animal.
they used the liver of a buffolo
Some Plains arrow points were made of antelope, elk or buffalo bone (not from animal organs), attached with sinew taken from a buffalo's legs or spine. Bone points do not survive as well as those of metal or stone so there are only a few in museums today. As soon as white traders arrived, natives quickly obtained ready-made metal points as well as thin sheet metal and tools for making their own. Stone and bone points became obsolete at that instant. Jim Hamm in his book "Bows and Arrows of the Native Americans" states that he has seen bone points made by Kiowas on the southern Plains, plus a few from the northern Plains, but they are today quite rare. His experiments show that antelope leg bones make sharper bone points than either buffalo or deer - heating the point allows it to take a sharper edge as well as hardening it.
harp
The liver is the most important organ affected in yellow fever.
deer, Buffalo, rabbits, birds, any thing to keep them living
nerve system
Tympanum