Primitive Archer
Main Discussion Area => Cave Men only "Oooga Booga" => Topic started by: swamp monkey on August 17, 2014, 09:41:41 pm
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I recently took a trip to Sanibel island, and Key Marco. I brought back some lightning whelk shells. My first tool project was to make a shell hammer. Based on the blade, I call it an ax. I am still learning about these shell tools, so calling it a hammer seems kind of goofy for what it really seems to do.
Shell: Busycon perversum
Handle: Osage orange
Wrap: rawhide
Once it is good and dry I will find a tree to chop and see how it does.
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shell and handle assembled.
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Wrapped with wet rawhide ready to dry.
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I cut some limbs off a redbud today. It worked! Now I need a Celt, adze, and a scraper for a project . . . ;)
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How did you drilled the shell ?
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I started with flint chips and sand on the first one. I then tried a flint drill. An hour into it and my fingers ached from pressing so hard. I was about to run out of daylight so I finished with a dremel and diamond tipped bits. Not exactly oogga booga , but it will be used in that spirit. I have every intention of using this cutter to do some woodworking. I have two special projects in mind. I am crafting some other shell tools to go along with this.
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I bet a sharpened gator tooth could make a hell of a drill bit. That enamel would be real tough.
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Parnell, I may have to try that.
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I honestly think you mounted the shell on the wrong end of the handle. I think it should have been mounted like a 'Hawk with the head always travelening up the tapered shaft. Especially for heavy hitting.
Also, I think a hammer is more likely as the soft shell wouldn't hold up to very much cutting. The Calusas diet was mostly shell fish and I think they were more then likely used for hammering oyster shells off of the beds at low tide, since that was their main diet and the source of the debris that built their mounds.
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I agree about the handle thickness/direction. If I make another or this one comes off I will see about that. However, I have not had any problems so far. I have cut branches at demos and the rawhide is holding.
You mentioned shell being fragile. I don't want to assume what you mean. Are you saying these type of tools might not be used as a pecking hammer or as an ax? I am going off of what the experts say. I haven't used it for shell bashing or pecking. I can say from experience the ax part works.
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I think they might have been used scraping or an adz in canoe construction but not for real heavy pounding. You see a lot of broken ones in old mounds and debris piles.
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This is pretty cool. From what I remember, my uncle had a shell adze. The handle was an L shaped branch with a slot on top. The shell was, a thick, marine seashell that was glued and bound on.
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This is pretty cool. From what I remember, my uncle had a shell adze. The handle was an L shaped branch with a slot on top. The shell was, a thick, marine seashell that was glued and bound on.
Ryan, do you recall if this was something he did as a living history thing or was it a family treasure?
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It’s a family treasure, most likely ornamental-only though.