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Making arrowheads, blades, and other stone tools was once a survival skill and is still a craft practiced by thousands of flintknappers around the world. In the United States, knappers gather at regional "knap-ins" to socialize, exchange ideas and material, buy and sell both equipment and knapped art, and make stone tools in the company of others. In between these gatherings, the knapping community stays connected through newsletters and the Internet. In this book, avid knapper and professional anthropologist John Whittaker offers an insider's view of the knapping community. He explores why stone tools attract modern people and what making them means to those who pursue this art. He describes how new members are incorporated into the knapping community, how novices learn the techniques of knapping and find their roles within the group, how the community is structured, and how ethics, rules, and beliefs about knapping are developed and transmitted. He also explains how the practice of knapping relates to professional archaeology, the trade in modern replicas of stone tools, and the forgery of artifacts. Whittaker's book thus documents a fascinating subculture of American life and introduces the wider public to an ancient and still rewarding craft.
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Debitage --- Flintknapping --- Stone implements --- Tools, Prehistoric
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"The capacity to mount stone tools in or on a handle is considered an important innovation in past human behaviour. The insight to assemble two different materials (organic and inorganic) into a better functioning entity indicates the presence of the required mental capacity and technological expertise. Although the identification of stone tool use based on microscopic analysis was introduced in the 1960's, distinguishing between hand-held and hafted tool use has remained a more difficult issue. This volume introduces a methodology, based on a systematic, in-depth study of prehension and hafting traces on experimental stone artefacts, which allows their recognition in archaeological assemblages"--P. [4] of cover.
Flintknapping. --- Tools, Prehistoric. --- Stone implements. --- Flintwork.
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Solutrean culture --- Flintknapping --- Stone implements --- Saône-et-Loire --- Antiquities.
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Flintknapping. --- Stone implements. --- Flintknapping --- Stone implements --- Flint implements --- Lithic implements --- Implements, utensils, etc. --- Debitage --- Flint knapping --- Knapping of flint --- Rock craft
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This book discusses the lithic technology of the neighboring sites of Ruien and Kerkhove (Belgium). The Final-Palaeolithic occupation of Ruien took place during the harsh climatic conditions of the Younger Dryas. The Early and Middle Mesolithic hunter-gatherers from Kerkhove on the other hand lived in the temperate and forested environments of the subsequent Early Holocene period. The aim of this work is more precisely to gain a better understanding of how the practice of flintknapping evolved throughout this time period. Should we describe it as a period of long-term stability or as a period of technological rupture and innovation? Can we pinpoint precise moments of change and how are these changes expressed? In the raw material procurement strategies? In the knapping methods or knapping techniques? Or even in the spatial organization of technological behavior at the sites?00To provide an answer to some of these questions, the lithic artefacts of Ruien and Kerkhove have been subjected to a detailed analysis, among others by means of lithic refitting. For Ruien, the refitting demonstrates an early adoption of some of the knapping procedures considered typical for lithic industries occurring at the end of the Younger Dryas and the beginning of the Holocene. For the Early Mesolithic of Kerkhove, based on the presence of more elaborate chaînes opératoires, the refitting results advocate a greater affinity with Final-Palaeolithic traditions than often acknowledged. Finally, the analysis also yielded important new results for the Middle Mesolithic, that remained poorly known at a technological level until now. During the latter, the Rhine-Meuse-Scheldt (RMS) area sees the introduction of new knapping methods, knapping techniques and knapping objectives marking a clear rupture with the preceding periods.
Industrie lithique --- Würm (glaciation) --- Holocène --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- Excavations (Archaeology). --- Flintknapping --- Flintknapping. --- Paleolithic period --- Paleolithic period. --- History --- History. --- Tools, Prehistoric --- Prehistoric peoples
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Tools, Prehistoric. --- Stone implements. --- Outils préhistoriques --- Outils de pierre --- Flintknapping. --- Outils préhistoriques
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Flintknapping --- Flint mines and mining, Prehistoric --- Stone implements --- Tools, Prehistoric --- Congresses
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Paleolithic period --- Tools, Prehistoric --- Hunting and gathering societies --- Flintknapping --- Human beings --- Pleistocene-Holocene boundary --- Migrations
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