"This should be a pot used by Native Americans." Looking at the half-spherical pot that was dug out and flattened, Leonard Ethan quickly identified who the pot should belong to.
Leonard was very familiar with this pot because it was similar to the large stew pot he had seen in the Otter Tribe before, and even looked like it came from the same factory.
In fact, it was normal for these pots to look alike, as the iron pots traded by early Europeans and indigenous tribes did come from a few European steel factories.
For the Western colonists, exchanging metal tools and weapons for various furs with these indigenous people was a very profitable business.
According to records, Native Americans had to stack otter furs to the same height as a gun to buy one, and had to trade a pot of the same weight as the fur for a pot.