Little late to the party but I’ll chime in. I go for an inch by 2-2 1/4 inches long which seems to make a good weight. You’ve gotta remember Ashby reports are for penetrating bone. The first rule is structural integrity which bone beats stone every time so we immediately accept that none of the rest matter. You have to accept that with stone we can only take the close, broadside, quartering away hopefully shot. And I hunt with literally everything, super modern to literal sticks and stones, I’m a numbers and math nerd though and a realist.
So a 2 to 1 gets me almost 80-90 grains with obsidian, I use pine pitch glue and sinew to hold the point and taper the glue down the point so that there’s no “shelf”. It adds another 15-20 grains. I use ocean spray shoot shafts which are naturally tapered and help with FOC (which helps with stabilizing the arrow) and that combo I’ve hunted elk with. The natives probably didn’t realize the science behind what they used but they used what worked better and it ends up the science backs it up. Those “bird points” are great at penetrating and allow the use of smaller shafts like todays micro diameter arrows which are more forgiving, add penetration, buck the wind better, and all sorts of benefits. Also uses less precious resources(knappable stone!).
In conclusion, those middle 3 look like money!! Get em sharp, put them in the vitals and they’ll kill for ya.