Bone tools frame made by Russy

larson1951

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Apr 8, 2009
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Larson, I like your bone awls. I'm a bone tool guy too as I always find more bone than flint on any of my local sites. The only thing I find more than "finished bone" is pottery shard scatter amongst the middens. You have a nice pronounced patina polish on much of yours. The only time I come across that characteristic is when it's found deep and/or dry. Mine always seem to be sun and salt bleached.
I've got hundreds I found in the last 30 years or so. Most are in similiar condition as the pic I'm attaching.
Thanks, good post! Lone Star
 

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hey thanks that's cool stuff lone star
what is that thingy on the right end of the ruler??

steve
 

Looks the end of a long-bone to me......great stuff buddy.....love it!What were the flattend quills used for?
 

Steve, I am amazed at the condition of the bone and the polish you see on them in the photo, most of the time when we find any bone items here it is sun bleached with little if any polish as Lone Star has said.
 

You know fellas, I bet a lot has to do with the characteristics of the soil that covers the bone as well as the preserving polish the article had in it's lifetime. The local stuff to me probably baked in the sun on a shell, mud,grass area where it dried out and went " crispy critter and brittle" before being covered by earth. Stuff I found digging in Central Texas always had a polish to it although the calcium concretions played hell with that as well.
That thingy to the right side is weird. If the primitives here didn't have venetian blinds on their windows I bet it's an ear lobe. It's a hard stone, so it was brought here. Ain't no rock in these parts. In over 30 years that's the only one I've found here at home base.
Bone was all the rage around here for body piercing and adornment. I even found some scrimshawed bird bone that was either nose or ear adornment. Gotta work, Thanks fellas. Lone Star
 

neo-the flattened quills were used for decorating par fleche bags, moccasins or other clothing
they were flattened and then dyed red, green, yellow, etc.
steve

lone star- i still think that iece mentioned is very unique
 

Great looking tray on Bone Awls and Tools Steve. Russy does a great job putting those together for you.


I was told by an Archaeologist doing a dig here locally that the reason the Bone items last so long in our area has to do with all of the Mussell Shell mixed in with the soil that helps to preserve the Bone and keep it from deteriorating.
 

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