Native American Stone?

johnnyblaze

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Dec 20, 2010
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Hey everyone first time in this section
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Found this strange rock not Native to RI..I think?
It appears to have an elongated skull and is contoured to fit a human hand perfectly any way you hold it..
Is it me or is this strange?Someone suggested Native American i did find it in Narragansett territory..

~Blaze~
 

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I would be no help on weather its an artifact or not. Way out of my area. But the person I would be inclined to listen to his thoughts, is Charl (member).
 

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Sorry, just a rock..... I found hundreds like yours that fit in my hands perfectly, just mother nature at work...
 

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Thanks for all the comments i actually found it at a house i remodeled..It was in Narragansett Indian territory beside the front step along with other stones and 6 or 7 arrow points..Somebody was collecting them over the years and putting them there..

~Blaze~
 

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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bezoar

just a wild guess, but were there cows around? check out the pic on this page.:dontknow:

not an artifact, but unusually high polish.
That is some interesting stuff right there!
I will say this if you had this stone in your hand you would think differently..All the grooves match your fingers,your palm,your entire hand.
I metal detect woods and gold pan streams to try and find gold sifting stones all day and looking but i have never seen a stone quite like it around here..
Whoever found it and put it there could also tell simply,something is quite different here.

~Blaze~
 

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Yeah I feel the same way. ..the person who put it there her name is mother nature
 

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Someone on Project Camelot forum suggested Labradorite..
After looking it might be..
 

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Native Americans have been known to carry certain stones around. A Glorieta meteorite was carried here by the people of the Pojoaque Pueblo for what was reported to have to have been a very long time and obviously handled. Report from the 50's.

I don't see Labradorite. The stuff I have is very irredesant and glows.
 

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Yes, it could have been a Native American stone. Better light would help as far as the mineralization, it appears to be fossilized sea floor (basalt) with Quartz, polished by glacial movement.
 

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ImageUploadedByTreasureNet.com1453573444.995159.jpg

This one is shaped very suggestively like a giant tooth or claw. It is fossilized sea floor, basalt.
The shapes are not the same, but the color, polished surface, and fracture lines seem to be, is this similar to yours?
 

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View attachment 1263829

This one is shaped very suggestively like a giant tooth or claw. It is fossilized sea floor, basalt.
The shapes are not the same, but the color, polished surface, and fracture lines seem to be, is this similar to yours?

Bingo you got it i found it at a cabin right on the ocean..I think it was used or carried by a Narragansett Indian as it was in there territory in Narragansett..
I also think it was shaped by them..It just fits a human hand to perfect..Thanks for proving some of these clowns wrong!:laughing7:

~Blaze
 

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I was in Cowesette (spelling?) last summer. Just a fun fact, but hang on to that rock. It's not worth money, but still cool and was most likely carried as they used it as healing stones. It's millions of years old but no more than 200 million according to Google, which I don't see how anyone came up with that number. And I would bet it was carried sometime within the last 18,000 years as glaciers retreated north and deposited it in Rhode Island. I still can't wrap my head around anything lasting 200 million years, not to mention stone tools being 300k years old and still sharp. The basalt I posted, I found it on my property in Ohio, along with some other wild **** that raises serious questions with the timeline modern science has given.
 

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I was in Cowesette (spelling?) last summer. Just a fun fact, but hang on to that rock. It's not worth money, but still cool and was most likely carried as they used it as healing stones. It's millions of years old but no more than 200 million according to Google, which I don't see how anyone came up with that number. And I would bet it was carried sometime within the last 18,000 years as glaciers retreated north and deposited it in Rhode Island. I still can't wrap my head around anything lasting 200 million years, not to mention stone tools being 300k years old and still sharp. The basalt I posted, I found it on my property in Ohio, along with some other wild **** that raises serious questions with the timeline modern science has given.


Cool man did you see my post where someone said they were used by the Native Americans to polish pottery?

~Blaze
 

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