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  2. Worry stone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Worry_stone

    As a folk practice implement, worry stones have many origins. Variations on the concept originate in ancient Greece, Tibet, Ireland, and multiple Native American tribes. [citation needed] The concept of a worry stone began by the simple action of picking a smooth stone and fiddling with the stone.

  3. Cupstone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cupstone

    Cupstones, also called anvil stones, pitted cobbles and nutting stones, among other names, are roughly discoidal or amorphous groundstone artifacts among the most common lithic remains of Native American culture, especially in the Midwestern United States, in Early Archaic contexts.

  4. Cherokee marbles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cherokee_marbles

    Cherokee marbles is a game similar to rolley hole, [2] an Anglo-American game comprising at least two teams of marble players, although the dimensions are different and rolley hole uses three holes instead of five. [3] Cherokee marbles incorporates elements which are also found in such diverse games as croquet, bocce ball, and billiards.

  5. Cherokee funeral rites - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cherokee_Funeral_Rites

    Cherokee grave found on Bussell Island, Tennessee, containing a skeleton and three pottery vessels. Cherokee funeral rites comprise a broad set of ceremonies and traditions centred around the burial of a deceased person which were, and partially continue to be, practiced by the Cherokee peoples.

  6. List of U.S. state minerals, rocks, stones and gemstones

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_U.S._state...

    The thunderegg, a nodule-like geological structure, similar to a geode, that is formed within a rhyolitic lava flow, were said by the Native Americans of Warm Springs to have been created by thunder spirits that lived in the craters of Mount Hood and Mount Jefferson.

  7. Zuni fetishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zuni_fetishes

    The primary non-Native source for academic information on Zuni fetishes is the Second Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology submitted in 1881 by Frank Hamilton Cushing and posthumously published as Zuni Fetishes in 1966, with several later reprints. Cushing reports that the Zuni divided the world into six regions or directions: north, west ...