Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Bleeding for my craft

Hi All,

A brief update from the lab. Today I taught the students how to make stone tools, often called "flint knapping." Several of the students were really looking forward to this activity. They were pretty excited to try working the obsidian nodules into biface tools.
I'm afraid there weren't any budding Homo erectus the group, but they could have passed for Homo habilus.

All in all, however, they did better than Jessica and me. The total injury count (requiring band-aids):
Professor: 2
TA: 2
Class: 1 (and there are five of them!)
Next week, we are going to talk about glassmaking and archaeological analysis of glass, but we will also pull out the lithic fragments from the Davenport site and apply some of the practical skills everyone learned, using the new vocabulary to say, "This is the proximal and medial segment of a secondary reduction flake, complete with hackle lines and an eraillure scar indicating the striking platform above the bulb of percussion."

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2 comments:

  1. Ah, but most importantly...how many naughas gave their hides for this experiment?
    Hope all is well,
    Amy :)

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  2. I finally had to slaughter a whole new herd of Naugas for this exercise. The old hides had given all they could over 10 years of tool making!

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