Grinding stone?

Virginiaguy

Jr. Member
Jun 29, 2019
40
152
Northern Virginia/Shenandoah Valley
Detector(s) used
Fischer 1266-X
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting

Attachments

  • IMG_9237.JPG
    IMG_9237.JPG
    1.1 MB · Views: 108
  • IMG_9229.JPG
    IMG_9229.JPG
    1.4 MB · Views: 114
  • IMG_9236.JPG
    IMG_9236.JPG
    1.3 MB · Views: 132
Last edited:
Welcome to the forum!

Tough to say for sure from what is shown. Likely natural though.
 

Looks like a water worn cobble, probably quartzite, with a dark patina from sitting in water. The smoother depression in the second picture is natural, occurring before the chunk of stone fell into the river and got tumbled eons ago. The depression shown in the first and third pictures is where a spall was struck off the cobble. The break in the rim of the depression on the bottom right of the third photo is the place the cobble was struck that dislodged the spall. That may have been intentional. When I want to make a Savannah River point, I find a quartzite cobble similar to that one and slam the edge of it down on another cobble to pop off a spall just like that. Could have also happened accidentally by machinery or mother nature, but not pecked out like if someone was intentionally making a depression to use as a mortar. If found where it doesn't belong, may have been carried there to use as a an expedient mortar.
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top