Ok, Tim, I've been thinking about this very thing for a while, never getting around to trying my prototypes. So. A few ideas.
1. Rough tiller a thin bow, maybe 1/4" thick, bamboo or wood. Spiral wrap the entire thing in 1/8" dia hemp craft cord. Sinew back OVER the cord wraps, thus using using the cord to "lift" the sinew. Secure sinew at tips. Cut off all the cordage on the sides and belly of the bow, leaving short parallel pieces running across the bow while the sinew runs lengthwise.
2. Belly lam of wood or bamboo, center core of rattan splints, sinew backed.
3. Mollegabet style bow with wide shoulders and 60/40 bending limb/lever rstio. Could be bamboo. Sinew or silk cable is wound round from shoulder to shoulder, similar to the silk/bamboo bow from TBB. Then flax or other "STIFF" cable is run UNDER the stretchy cable at the shoulders and back to the limb tips. Dual cable system forces middle cable to stetch, but creates stiff levers.
Also. same as above, but lever is shortened and recurved. A few small diameter bamboo sections laid crosswise act as string bridges and flax cable can be bound down to recurve. A cross-hatching wrap of cables can even be arrangel to improve stability of recurve.
4. Small diameter, thicker walled bamboo is split and tiller roughed out. This creates a "U" shape. The bow limb is then wrapped candycane fashion witb twine, but in both directions (as the Meares Heath artifact was wrapped.) Now, the bow can be cable-backed, the cable riding atop the twine wraps which span the open end of the "U".
Alternatively, the "U" cross section bamboo bow limb is backed with a linen fabric strip, such that the fabric spans the open top of the "U", and the fabric laps over the sides however much needed. This creates a hollow limb.
Both these designs take advantage of the Poisson Effect. The "U" cross section would attempt to flatten when bent but the wraps or the fabric would not allow it, increasing stiffness per mass.
Has anyone tried multiple cables? Say three or four running abreast, following the front profile contours of the bow by riding in small grooves set into the string bridges.
More to come.