Saturday, August 21, 2021

Gansett Sites

 Went for a walk in Woods Hole (up Mast Rd) and saw a small piece of woods with a rock above the surface:

 
There's got to be some rock piles up in there  - I thought. As it turns out, every low bump you see in the above or below pictures is a rock pile (eg at the foot of the tree above). That's what rock piles look like most of the time around here - not large monumental cairns. 
I have now found small sites at several points along the edge of the Golf Course. We can suspect that the whole area was once rock piles. There are more, further east.

Thursday, August 12, 2021

More quartz artifacts from this year

 These photos are from a nice weekend day at the end of May. I went to a favorite place in southeastern Massachusetts and was really pleased to see this projectile point, fully exposed, waiting to be picked up.

 
This is what I would call a Squibnocket Stemmed point. Others might simply call it "small stemmed." The material is typical. This one is somewhat unusual in that it has one shoulder. I have found a few like this.


I left this place and drove south into Rhode Island, to another place I know. The conditions weren't great but there were quartz flakes visible here and there. I bent down to pick up a barely exposed flake, and was surprised and elated to see this pop out of the ground. This was right after I picked it up. That clean bit on the left side of the base is the only part that had been peeking out of the ground.

I really like this shape, with the square stem. I don't have many like this and it's unusual for me to find one that is not broken.

 
I found some other fragments too. Another lucky day.

Thursday, August 05, 2021

Quartz artifacts from Rhode Island

 I haven't posted anything here in a long time. I've got a lot of finds to post and I hope to get back to posting here again more regularly.

These photos are from an evening in June. It was a Friday after work, which is a favorite time for me to get out and look for stuff. I feel like I have good luck on Friday evenings, and a good find is a great way to start my weekend. On this particular evening it had rained hard and I wanted to go to a place I know where there is lots to find. Other people search for artifacts in this place as well, so I was happy to get there and see no fresh footprints. Most of the stuff I find at this site is broken, with many or most of the artifacts likely having been discarded during the production process. I did find a lot of broken stuff on this occasion. In this photo there are artifacts ranging from crude bifaces that were likely preforms or discarded production pieces, to fragments of finely pressure flaked tools. Over 99 percent of the artifacts I find at this site are made from quartz.

 
I saw this interesting looking broken edge and snapped a picture. It looked pretty big, I thought it might be a big flake or perhaps a broken tool. 
 
But, it wasn't broken. The shape of this, I would call a Levanna. It doesn't show any pressure retouch to the edges, or any use wear, as far as I can tell. Perhaps this piece was not satisfactory to the maker and was discarded.
 
 I found these crude, thick bifaces too. I think things like this are really interesting. I have seen them described as preforms, and "choppers." There is a lot of marine shell at this place. I wonder what kinds of tools were used to open clam shells?
I took this photo on the way out. It was getting dark, thunder could be heard in the distance. We had so much rain in June and early July. I wish we had had that rain in the spring- but I made the most of the weather anyway. This photo is so representative of the last many months for me- a handful of artifacts tucked into a Covid mask from my pocket.
 
Here is that nice big artifact cleaned up at home. I'm not even sure I can call this a projectile point. It's really pretty, though.
 
It's thin, too. It's hard to find something like this, in this size, in this disturbed setting.
Here is the best of the day's finds, cleaned up. It was a good and lucky day for me. I hope everyone is having a great summer and staying healthy.

Monday, August 02, 2021

Cape Cod Museum of Natural History

 
An exhibit devoted to conventional archeology. The museum owns a few nice points but, off-hand, I would say their collection - as displayed -  is not as good as mine or Chris Pittman's.

I went to the museum hoping to see the mammoth tooth. They have changed the signage which used to say the tooth was around 12 thousand years old. Now it says that it is from the "Pleistocene" which ended around 12 thousand years ago. Much better!

Sunday, July 18, 2021

Name that rock

Update:

I am posting a new pic of this material, against a neutral background, an unpolished surface.

I believe this is called a metamorphic igneous rock. Does it have a name? It is from glacial gravel on the beach.


Previously Had:

Can anyone offer a clue about what kind of rock this is? It looked like granite at first but it is mostly a reddish mineral:


What I take to be a working edge, was upper-right in first pic, lower-right in second pic. Here:

Monday, July 05, 2021

Trail Maintenance with Stile/Style (Essex CT)

    I usually find myself shaking my head at "Trail Maintenance Photos" that breach "stone walls" and otherwise disturb probable Indigenous Ceremonial Stone Landscape features, but I'd like to give a CSL award to the Windswept Ridge Preserve of Essex, CT for this remarkable alternative to disturbing possibly quite ancient rows of stones or Qusuqaniyutôkanash...

(Photo by Jason Greene:)


Tuesday, June 29, 2021

Mounds from Spring Creek, PA

Reader Jon sends new pictures:

Here are some photos I wanted to share with you. Rock Pile A  is images 1002, 1008 and (1009 from 2016). Rock Pile B, 100 yards away is image 1004.



Tuesday, June 22, 2021

Some images from Jim Wilson’s Zoom Presentation

 













"Learn what history, science and Native Americans have to say about ambiguous stoneworks found throughout the Northeast Woodlands—including here in the Lehigh Valley—and how public and private organizations are coming together to document, preserve and protect them..."

Watch: https://fb.watch/6fxQG6CmSB/

Sunday, June 20, 2021

Underwater archaeology team finds ancient obsidian flakes 2,000 miles from quarry

 



“An underwater archaeologist from The University of Texas at Arlington is part of a research team studying 9,000-year-old stone tool artifacts discovered in Lake Huron that originated from an obsidian quarry more than 2,000 miles away in central Oregon.

The obsidian flakes from the underwater archaeological site represent the oldest and farthest east confirmed specimens of western obsidian ever found in the continental United States.

 “In this case, these tiny obsidian artifacts reveal social connections across North America 9,000 years ago,” said Ashley Lemke, assistant professor of sociology and anthropology at UT Arlington. “The artifacts found below the Great Lakes come from a geological source in Oregon, 4,000 kilometers away—making it one of the longest distances recorded for obsidian artifacts anywhere in the world.”

The find in Lake Huron is part of a broader study to understand the social and economic organization of caribou hunters at the end of the last ice age. Water levels were much lower then; scientists have found, for example, ancient sites like stone walls and hunting blinds that are now 100 feet underwater.


“This particular find is really exciting because it shows how important underwater archaeology is,” Lemke said. “The preservation of ancient underwater sites is unparalleled on land, and these places have given us a great opportunity to learn more about past peoples.”

https://www.uta.edu/news/news-releases/2021/06/15/lemke-lake-huron

Citation: O’Shea JM, Lemke AK, Nash BS, Sonnenburg EP, Ferguson JR, Nyers AJ, et al. (2021) Central Oregon obsidian from a submerged early Holocene archaeological site beneath Lake Huron. PLoS ONE 16(5): e0250840.

 https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0250840

 

Saturday, June 19, 2021

Falmouth area arrowheads - ID requested

 Can any one identify the arrowheads here:

I am particularly interested in this one, which looks like a late stage "paleo" point:
Note the base is "thinned" compared to the upper part.
Wow. Wish I found it.
Update: Apparently I am wrong, it is a Middle Woodland "Fox Creek" point. Thank you to Curt Hoffman for the IDs.

Wednesday, June 16, 2021

Another "Chamber" Video

The "Rattlesnake Squamation/Scalation" Variation

   I just watched this video from Mike Luoma of VT yesterday. We've been communicating electronically on FaceBook and I sent him this image below soon after viewing it: 

A captured still from:

Wednesday, June 02, 2021

Clovis First Dies (AGAIN!)

New evidence may change timeline for when people first arrived in North America (phys.org)


[Research from 20 or so years ago at Monte Verde in Chile already changed that "timeline". Seems like the only people still promoting a 13K time depth for man in America are textbook writers and YouTube.]