File:Building a traditional grass hut, Part 2 (500fcde5-d134-bca6-9831-2b6a4b31a68d).JPG
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Summary
[edit]English: Building a traditional grass hut, Part 2 | |||||
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Photographer |
English: NPS photo |
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Title |
English: Building a traditional grass hut, Part 2 |
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Publisher |
English: U.S. National Park Service |
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Description |
English: wood frame is having grass woven onto it by people in traditional dress Traditionally, Africans have incorporated natural materials from their surroundings into the building of their huts or homes. Thatching is quite durable. They build huts of grass thatched over a framework of branches, planted into the ground and tied with strips of bark or rope at the apex. The men usually gather the branches and construct the framework, while the woman gather grass and set about thatching the hut in layers. The basic design is uniform: layers of dried grass or palm fronds are woven to a wooden frame so tightly that water can't penetrate into the building below. Thatch can protect a home from summer’s searing heat.
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Depicted place |
English: Hagerman Fossil Beds National Monument |
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Date | Taken on 25 June 2014 | ||||
Accession number | |||||
Source |
English: NPGallery |
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Permission (Reusing this file) |
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NPS Unit Code InfoField | HAFO | ||||
Album(s) InfoField | English: 2014 Smithsonian Sister Park Agreement Signing |
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current | 08:02, 12 May 2024 | 3,264 × 2,448 (4.96 MB) | BMacZeroBot (talk | contribs) | Batch upload (Commons:Batch uploading/NPGallery) |
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