hi, i like making replicas of Native American style bows. on this sight i have seen several sudbury type bows over the years that people had made. some of the things that get my attention is it has a handle. most Native style bows were D bows.looking at a drawing in a book called N.A. BOWS ARROWS AND QUIVERS VOL. 1 on page 34 is a Wampanoag bow, the famous Sudbury bow. looking at it and taking in its style, looks rather modern for those times in N.America, or more so European to some extent.for those times.which got me to thinking. did any other tribes have such a handled bow? that kind of style? then looking at the map of tribes in the northeast theres the Onandaga on page 64. further inland from the coast with a very similar handled bow.these bows have handles thick enough in relation of limb thickness to say they didnt bend through the handle.gets me wondering could Europeans with bows influenced this design? could they have sailed to the coast of N.America and maybe came into contact with tribes such as those mentioned? when i read about viking bows {these are those Europeans i was thinking might of sailed here}, i came across 3 different types the used. something like a recurve. a simpler style of a English long bow than the English made, and the Holmegaard bow .being made of Ash, Yew, or Elm.the later two resembles the Sudbury bow to some degree and those two styles {long bow and Holmegaard } could be made of the many hardwoods found in what is now the eastern U.S. of that time period.anyone want to chime in thoughts, insight, or guesses of what might of lead up to this style of bow? Tony