A definitive call

vibes

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Aug 20, 2007
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Northern Indiana
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Fisher 1280x Aquanaut

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The piece was stopped in production. The stone was going to be some kind of a grooved stone head. The grove was for hafting onto a wood handle. The maker realized, after the initial spall on the right popped off, that his efforts were going to be wasted. This was especially true, considering the other faults in the stone. With this new information, he (and I say he because it was likely a he) abandoned the project.

Is that what you were looking for?

Best Regards,
3creeks
 

your welcome, vibes

PS. The other red rock is just a geofact; which is just a unique natural stone, not altered by man.

3creeks
 

Still pretty cool to find it. It seems they broke a lot during production. What area/country :laughing7: did you find it in?
HH
TnMountains
 

TripleCreek said:
The piece was stopped in production. The stone was going to be some kind of a grooved stone head. The grove was for hafting onto a wood handle. The maker realized, after the initial spall on the right popped off, that his efforts were going to be wasted. This was especially true, considering the other faults in the stone. With this new information, he (and I say he because it was likely a he) abandoned the project.

Is that what you were looking for?

Best Regards,
3creeks

i agree
 

From your photo, I would not rule out the possibility that the grooved piece was made as a maul, and never intended to be an axe. If that is the case, it is a finished artifact.

I found a 3/4 grooved maul in northern Pennsylvania the summer before last. It clearly was made as such, and indeed was more crudely fashioned than one would see in most grooved axes. I guess finesse is not needed when one is crafting the Native American equivalent of a sledge hammer.

artorius
 

It may very well be a maul. Probably is, even, IMO.

But the groove in it is odd -- very narrow in relation to width, and round at the bottom. This at least isn't your usual hafting groove. Maybe it's a special kind for tying it with thongs. Or maybe they were using it, year in and year out, as a shaft smoother ?
 

If I was able to go back through my life and see, in an omniscient way, the coins that I did not dig because I just wasn’t sure about the signal, or the trophy buck that held close to cover while I walked by, never seeing, or the true story of just how this rock developed this unusual grove, it would be a version of heaven for me. I doubt I ever will have the opportunity, but it would be really fun to see where I was right and wrong. I responded to this topic with a little “tongue in cheek” because Vibe ask for “a definitive call” and I gave it to her. Truth is, it is very unlikely anyone will ever know, not even me, just what the circumstances were that actually were responsible for creating the unusual grove in this rock . I believe that my explanation is plausible, but there are an infinite alterative explanations available. For instance: A kid made the grove, practicing primitive technology, a month before Vibe found it. (Come to think of it, the grooving area does look a little “fresher” then any other grooved axes I have found ?????) See what I mean.

I certainly hope this “mudding the water” does not take away the “ching” that Vibes was looking for (sorry if it does, Vibes) but it sure is fun to speculate.

Stay cool,
3creeks
 

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