North American arrowheads

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Riven

Full Member
Dec 23, 2006
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England
IMG_2664.JPG These have just come into my possession and where found by my father 50 years ago whilst working in West Virginia for a few months. He died a long time ago and all I know is that he found them in the fields of a farm he was invited to shoot on.
They really peaked my interest as a kid and would like to find out more about them, who made them and how long ago.
So any ideas?
Riven.
 
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Janne

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Feb 10, 2016
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Made before, or in the century after, the Columbian exchange.

As they have been removed from the area where they rested, the archeology is lost.

Still, interesting and cool finds! So much skill has been used!
 
The best I can guess at Riven, is that these are pre mid 18th century, & they are woodland Indian arrow heads. During the fur trade era the natives often used to cut up brass trade kettles to make arrow heads & jewelry, it was far easier than knapping flint.
Arrow-Head-CROPPED.jpg

Trade kettle arrow head.
Kettle-custom-024-REDUCED.jpg

My copy of an 18th century brass trade kettle.

Arrow Head Forum: https://forums.arrowheads.com/ Might be worth taking a look at.
Regards, Keith.
 

Toddy

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Jan 21, 2005
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Maybe.
I'm with Tengu on this though; those don't look skillful/tidy/fine worked enough to be Neolithic, iimmc.
Some of them honestly look more like a modern practice sort of pieces.

Numbered from left to right, and row one and two following from top down, No.1 looks awfully 'thick' like it's a crude flake, No.10 looks more like a core, while No.8 is a most uneven looking barb and tanged arrowhead...and it's the only one, as is the long flake blade, No.6....usually from the same area and the same culture, similar styles are found, even for differing purposes.
It's an odd assemblage is what I'm trying to explain.
Different culture and material to ours though.

Be good if Dave saw this, he's good at spotting knapping stuff.
 
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santaman2000

M.A.B (Mad About Bushcraft)
Jan 15, 2011
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Maybe.
I'm with Tengu on this though; those don't look skillful/tidy/fine worked enough to be Neolithic, iimmc.
Some of them honestly look more like a modern practice sort of pieces.

Numbered from left to right, and row one and two following from top down, No.1 looks awfully 'thick' like it's a crude flake, No.10 looks more like a core, while No.8 is a most uneven looking barb and tanged arrowhead...and it's the only one, as is the long flake blade, No.6....usually from the same area and the same culture, similar styles are found, even for differing purposes.
It's an odd assemblage is what I'm trying to explain.
Different culture and material to ours though.

Be good if Dave saw this, he's good at spotting knapping stuff.
That’s the irony of it isn’t it? They were a much more recent people with the more primitive technique. Although crosslandkelly may have a point too. Many of these are found when plowing and there’s no telling how many times they were struck by plows over the years before somebody picked them up.
 
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Toddy

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Jan 21, 2005
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Could it be that they have been damaged and or degraded over the years they were on the ground?
I made this one a couple of years ago at the moot.
View attachment 56716

Plough struck causes recognisible damage, and those little arrowheads aren't really likely to be hit with the plough. Unlike pottery or fine metal, the soil heave doesn't abrade them much since they're really hard stone, and they don't crumple like the metal. Usually arrowheads were damaged when they struck something. They do shatter on occasion if they hit bone, or a miss and hit rock, etc., Not saying it doesn't happen, but on the whole flint shards, flakes, and tools come out of the ground looking pretty much as they did when they went in.

M
 

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