MAMucker
Bronze Member
Here’s a fine type example, that I found yesterday afternoon. A rare find -intact, which includes a needle tip.
This type is named after Squibnocket Pond on Martha’s Vinyard (Richie 1969b). There are a variety of small triangles lumped into the Squibnocket grouping. For what good reason, I do not know.
This example does have basal thinning, but No grinding.
This one has distinct features that match hundreds of others that I have seen in collections on Martha’s Vinyard, Southeastern MA and RI.
The grouping gives this type an oddly vast use period: Late Archaic - Late Woodland. Since 1969 (50+years) only the observance of basal grinding has freed one variant from this group, the Snappit Triangle. The Snappit oddly mirrors all other typical Squibnocket Triangle ID Traits and looks exactly the same as this example. But, this is a Squibnocket.
This type is named after Squibnocket Pond on Martha’s Vinyard (Richie 1969b). There are a variety of small triangles lumped into the Squibnocket grouping. For what good reason, I do not know.
This example does have basal thinning, but No grinding.
This one has distinct features that match hundreds of others that I have seen in collections on Martha’s Vinyard, Southeastern MA and RI.
The grouping gives this type an oddly vast use period: Late Archaic - Late Woodland. Since 1969 (50+years) only the observance of basal grinding has freed one variant from this group, the Snappit Triangle. The Snappit oddly mirrors all other typical Squibnocket Triangle ID Traits and looks exactly the same as this example. But, this is a Squibnocket.
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