Compare images of authentic arrowheads with your arrowhead. While this may be a crude way to determine authenticity, it may at least help determine if the piece was recently made. Indian artifacts and rocks used as tools or construction material are a fascinating archaeological find almost anyone ...
as none of us would not be here without them. But it was clear to me that stone arrowheads wouldn’t work for my project, because I didn’t have materials close by. Soon after I ran out of glass and it dawned on me, (this is me talking to myself) “Dave, what are you doing ...
When most people hear the term knapping they think of arrowheads and spearpoints.But many examples of stone knives and axes have been discovered.Stone scrapers were used to:prepare hides for tanning remove bark from branches shape wood for arrow shafts and bowsFor example:...
A Desolate Place for a Defiant People, Sayers refers to it as the “nameless site.”“I don’t want to put a false name on it,” he explains. “I’m hoping to find out what the people who lived here
Okay, but why was the river named “Flint’ in the first place? There was a crossing at the river where the Indians would go to gather rocks of flint to make their trinkets and possibly arrowheads. They named the river ‘Pawanunking’, which translated means “River of Flint”. ...
1924: Indian Citizenship Act Citizenship for Native Americans before the 1924 Indian Citizenship Act was hard to come by. Before the Civil War, only those with one-half or less Native American blood were offered citizenship. Most Native American women who had married U.S. citizens were offered...
Remains found at the site included jewellery, stone arrowheads, tools made of deer antlers, wooden spears and huge amounts of animal bones and broken pottery. “These finds suggest Stone Age people went to the village at special times of the year to feast and party”, says Mike Parker Pears...
Remains found at the site included jewellery, stone arrowheads, tools made of deer antlers, wooden spears and huge amounts of animal bones and broken pottery. “These finds suggest Stone Age people went to the village at special times of the year to feast and party”, says Mike Parker Pears...