Looks the part.
I'd love to take a closer look sometime. Making a boat like that with just fire and bone tools must have been a labour of weeks, if not months.
Thanks, Mrcharly. Unfortunately, while we initially did use fire, antler picks, bone adzes, and shells to remove the sap wood layer for the most part, and we learnt a lot in the process, a large portion of the project was done by bronze and steel tools. The wood was too moist to char easily, so we had to abandon the burn-out idea as we didn't have enough time. We didn't have stone tools either, as we didn't receive them in time which is a shame, since they'd obviously be a main component of the period. We should still be getting stone tools though, and we've set a side a section of the boat to do some more experimentation. In the end, while it's not exclusively a Middle Stone Age boat, in many ways its still a prehistoric boat. Whilst it is a shame it's not an entirely Mesolithic boat, it's just a fact of the reality of deadlines. Using a variety of tools allowed volunteers to gain experience in different periods of prehistory, I like to think.
This thread details the project from start to finish and it explains why we had to do things the way we did. It's quite hard to summarise a 6 week project.
Cheers.