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Maritime Archaic Reproductions |
I've been plugging away at my sections in the Bird Cove Groswater and Maritime Archaic papers which are technically due today. Hopefully I can at least get my parts written by Monday morning. Its tough getting back into peer reviewed writing. Blog writing is pretty forgiving by comparison, although I'm sure I'm much more likely to make mistakes here. If you see an error here, please correct me.
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Beaches Maritime Archaic Points |
While researching the papers, I was looking through reports at the Provincial Archaeology Office yesterday and came across something kind of interesting in Paul Carignan's Mercury Series volume,
The Beaches: A Multi Component Habitation Site in Bonavista Bay. In the 1970s, he found several stemmed Maritime Archaic points from this Newfoundland site that appear to have been resharpened while they were hafted. In the photo on the left, you can see that the widest part of the point, just above the stem is straight and parallel sided, but then halfway to the tip they take a sharp turn and become pointed. You resharpen a point by removing flakes from the edge, but you can't remove flakes from the part of the tool hidden under hafting material, so the shape of the point changes as it is resharpened. I think the parallel-sided part of the point and the stem were hidden under hafting material and only the small triangular tip was exposed and available to be resharpened.
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I've only been wrapping the stem |
They got me thinking that maybe I've been hafting stemmed Maritime Archaic Indian points incorrectly. I haven't seen the actual artifacts, but the photos in Carignan's reports make me think that the points were covered with lashings partway up the blade. When I've been hafting stemmed Maritime Archaic points I've only been wrapping the binding material around the wood and stem, but now I believe that the wrapping should extend much higher.
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I think they were hafted like this |
The Maritime Archaic Indian stemmed points recovered at the Beaches site all seem to have significant resharpening around the tip. The big change in the angle that takes place partway up the blade is most likely due to the points being resharpened in the haft, meaning that the wider part of the base of the blade was covered by wrapping. Its such a large area, that it probably also helps narrow down the hafting material to something like rawhide, or perhaps some sort of vegetable cordage or spruce root. Sinew seems unlikely to me now, because its such a fine thread that it would take a lot of wrapping to cover such a large area.
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Saglek Bay Maritime Archaic Point |
The stemmed points that I 've been making are a little different from these and I've been using Ramah chert artifacts from Saglek Bay in Labrador as my references. The Maritime Archaic stemmed points from Labrador have a little more sharply defined shoulders than the points from the Beaches, which have a softer transition from the stem to the blade, perhaps another clue that they were designed to accomodate lashing all the way from the stem, up the shoulders and onto the blade. I haven't noticed obvious resharpening on the stemmed points from Labrador, but there is sometimes a subtle change in the edge angle at about the same point. Going back and looking at my reproductions, I realize that I've been building that angle change into the points, but never actually making the connection that it might indicate a hafting area.
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I think the hafting should extend higher. |
Since I can't sell Ramah chert, I've been saving the Ramah stemmed points that I make in public flintknapping demonstrations and hafting them in a set of foreshafts. The idea was to haft every one with a different binding material, to try to show the variability that's possible and illustrate as many options as possible. I won't undo the ones that I've already done, because they still demonstrate that point, but I will start hafting more stemmed points with lashings that cover the base of the blade. What do you think? Are their other options or explanations?
Photo Credits:
1,3,6: Tim Rast
2,4: Modified images from Paul Carignan 1973,
Prehistoric Cultural Traditions at The Beaches Site, DeAk-1 Bonavista Bay. MA Thesis, Anthropology Memorial University of Newfoundland.
5: Photo from
Museum Notes - The Maritime Archaic Tradition by James Tuck