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Better cut tine flaker video, with flake measurements - clarification of old rec
AncientTech:
https://youtu.be/tJcIThXgu7g
This video better shows the flaking process. Some of the finishing flakes removed are approximately 20 mm in length, with 4mm x 2mm platforms.
Also, to clear up a misunderstanding that modern knappers may have, when looking at old records, it was commonly understood by American archaeologists (who dug archaeological sites), that a certain type of flaker was used in pressure flaking. This flaker is generally about two inches long, curved, and cut from the tip of a tine. Normally, the flaker will show signs of blunting, nicks, cuts, and striations, on and near the tip.
Because it was believed that these tools were used in "pressure flaking", they were the tools that were sometimes shown in early photos of the pressure flaking process. To the modern knapper - unacquainted with archaeological material - this could look like a "mistake", or an "error". But, what was not known to earlier American researchers, and to modern knappers, is that such tools - small curved tine tips - could be used in indirect percussion, in a manner analogous to pressure flaking. And, in certain instances, the tools could also function as pressure flakers, too.
I believe that there were some early American researchers who suspected indirect percussion, based on wear patterns, that do not correspond merely to pressure flaking.
Anyway, my interpretation is based on notes given by Grinnell (1872). And, my work gives a plausible theory for how these highly common flintknapping tools could have been used, in both indirect percussion, and pressure flaking, on raw stone.
Also, since my work was banned on Paleoplanet (no rules broken), and Arrowheadology (told that no one is interested), feel free to pass the video along to people who might otherwise not be allowed to see it. Again, it is based on an interpretation of Grinnell 1872, who recorded the living memory of flintknapping as it had been carried out, into the early 1800's, as a fall back for when steel was not available.
JoJoDapyro:
I'll for sure watch it again. Thanks for the video.
nclonghunter:
Hey Ben, that is some interesting techniques. Glad you didn't whack that puppy with the antler..lol
I have also read your article in Flintknapping Info on indirect antler punch knapping (http://flintknappinginfo.webstarts.com/uploads/Percussion.pdf). I have been earnestly trying to learn the punch technique. I finally got the pressure points in the hand grip to come together and felt that vise like grip you describe in punching. The antler tools you are using in the video I would think would be better used in the vertical punch method for the size of preform you are working on. After reducing to an edged biface is when the indirect hand method, in your video would be best used. As you have stated before the same tools can be used in different techniques, switching from a vertical leg punch to the horizontal hand punch for final finish. Either way, Thanks for the video.
AncientTech:
Lyman, actually that was a post I wrote years ago, when I first got started, probably between 2010 and 2011. I had asked the moderators of Paleoplanet to remove my old posts, because they contain too much incomplete, and inaccurate, information. But, they would not allow my posts to be removed. I also told them that if people try to use the early information the odds are that they will end up on an endless wild goose chase, with no hope of finding a way out. So, I told them that my posts should be removed, so as to not create a hindrance for other people. Still, they would not allow the posts to be removed. Much of the information that I first shared between 2010, and 2011, is accurate, and will outlive all of us. But, in order to find the meaning of what it all meant, what was needed was further information, from further research - not blind experiments.
In 2014, I found unpublished documentation of a flintknapping process, still being used around 1900, which I believe explains Ishi's cryptic statement, and explains the nature of the 1000's of antler drift cylinders that have been recovered from archaeological contexts. So, if that documentation had been included with my original posts from 2010-2012, then it would have been much easier for everyone to understand what it all meant. But, it took years to find that documentation. And, until I found it, the picture was incomplete.
As for the preform, and using the vertical punch, yes it can be done. And, I have seen some things that remind me of the vertical punch use. But, what a vertical punch will do is create a steeper platform, with more bulbing. This sort of thing can be good, in creating a steep isolated platform. But, if you want a thin edge with a gently turned contour, then the vertical punch can lead to excessive bulbing in the flake scars (at least for me).
le0n:
thanks for sharing this.
i'm ready for the next part of the video ;)
in the mean time, some of my observations...
this cheyenne hand-held indirect technique (if that is what you are demonstrating) is not very similar to that of the lacandon.
still from a video you uploaded:
* one apparent difference is the way the piece is supported outside of the palm
* another is the third, fourth, and fifth finger grip on the tine
* the tine is struck on the end (small-end) for a direct force
out of curiosity, did grinnell also describe a technique like the lacandon?
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