Primitive Archer
Main Discussion Area => Shooting and Hunting => Topic started by: jkyarcher on December 23, 2015, 10:23:33 pm
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I was reading stuff recently about stone age European arrowheads and saw the pics of the chisel style points and the ones
with micro blades inserted into bone and wood and was just wondering if anyone has actually used or tested these and how effective they can be. ( I know they must've worked just wondering if any "modern cavemen" have tried them out)
just curious..
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James Parker, a friend and member of PA made an arrow head from an antler tip with 5 micro blades inserted around the antler, similar to the Satellite Broadheads. He shot a doe through the shoulder, killed her and 3 of the micro blades were still attached to the tip. I don't have evidence but I'd bet a chisel point would be pretty devastating too. Probably deals better with bone than a head with a pointed end.
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Here's what I believe is referred to as a microlith arrow, part of it of course. I imagine an arrow like that would create a larger wound. Not sure how effective it would be.
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Fred Bear used a chisel type point on his broad heads.
At the Museum, he had in Gainesville, Florida, there was a heavy shoulder bone, of some type of animal, I forget which, with a chisel type bear broad head embedded deeply in it. It was the opposite shoulder from the side the arrow entered. He said the chisel type point would penetrate bone better, than the pointed type broad heads.
Wayne
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It's got my vote.
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I seen this this weekend and made one up, I plan on running it through a deer / elk this yr (after one comes home) I want to see how it will do. looks devastating. it was fun making. all pieces are just from beating a rock with a rock no knapping. Ed