
Wattle and daub is a composite building material used for making walls, in which a woven lattice of wooden strips called wattle is daubed with a sticky material usually made of some combination of wet soil, clay, sand, animal dung and straw. Wattle and daub has been used for at least 6000 years and is still an important construction material in ma...
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wattle_and_daub

in building construction, method of constructing walls in which vertical wooden stakes, or wattles, are woven with horizontal twigs and branches, ... [2 related articles]
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http://www.britannica.com/eb/a-z/w/15

Wattle-and-daub is a row of upright stakes with the spaces between woven through with small pieces of wood or thatch. On both sides of the wall, the wattle is daubed with clay, earth, plaster or mortar and smoothed. The wall is usually plastered and then whitewashed.
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Method of constructing walls consisting of upright stakes bound together with withes (strong flexible shoots or twigs, usually of willow), and covered in mud or plaster. This was the usual way of...
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http://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/20688

A primitive construction technique, where mud was spread across an interlacing network of twigs to create a stucco-like wall
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Wattle and daub is an ancient method of constructing walls. Flexible wooden rods, often hazel, of about one meter length and one centimetre diameter, are woven together and onto this framework a mixture of clay, chopped straw and animal dung (daub) is firmly pressed in.
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http://www.probertencyclopaedia.com/browse/TW.HTM

[
n] - building material consisting of interwoven rods and twigs covered with clay
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wall-construction consisting of wickerwork plastered with mud
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https://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/20434
noun building material consisting of interwoven rods and twigs covered with clay
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https://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/20974

Method of constructing walls consisting of upright stakes bound together with withes (strong flexible shoots or twigs, usually of willow), and covered in mud or plaster. This was the usual way of building houses in medieval Europe; it was also the traditional method used in Australia, Africa, the Middle East, and the Far East
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https://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/21221
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