The Texas Archaeological Research Laboratory at UT Austin owns one of these objects named for Hermann Schild that contains over 60 pages of artworks. For 10 points each:
[10h] Name these objects, which lend their name to a style of Plains Indian art that gradually replaced painting on buffalo hides. Richard Henry Pratt encouraged prisoners at Fort Marion to draw and sell their works in this style.
ANSWER: ledgers [or ledger art; prompt on notebooks]
[10e] Ledger artists borrowed from techniques used to paint on these cone-shaped dwellings of the Great Plains.
ANSWER: tipis [or tepees]
[10m] An early set of ledger books produced by this tribe depict their fearsome Dog Soldiers, who wore bands made of buffalo hide and porcupine quills. This tribe was once led by Chief Black Kettle.
ANSWER: Cheyenne (“shy-ANN”) [or Suhtai; or Sutaio; or Só'taeo'o; or Tsétsêhéstâhese; or Tsitsistas; accept Northern Cheyenne or Southern Cheyenne]
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