Agrarian Tools of The Woodland Period ~ POOR SIGNAL!
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- Опубликовано: 7 фев 2025
- I have tried on several occasions to video live hunts, but as many of you know, signal quality can be poor in the places I hunt. Cell phone cameras can be great, but the video quality is very much dependent on signal strength!
Amazing how many people are missing the beauty and craftsmanship of these tools! Keepersofthepast nice Woodland pieces thanks for sharing
I think some of these comments stem from ignorance , stupidituy,or jealousney!`!!!
@@shirleyvowell9563lol the archeology department at my university uses this channel to show students how to identify geofacts and quack archeology, but yes, the smartest and most educated people with the most amazing collections of real artifacts are just stupid, ignorant and jealous.
Great finds! Nice pieces.
A great group of artifacts. Clearly manipulated by human hand. Love the odd ball pieces. Thanks for all you share.
All natural in my opinion. I am very open minded and new , but I mean clear signs of natural erosion
There will always be some patina and other types of weathering. These are Woodland period tools, all used to ground corn, grains, nuts, seeds, and dried beans into a flower.
They’ve been worked. I find ones like this all the time where I Rockhound. Where I live we had huge settlements.
The other day I was at my spot in the middle of the river on the gravel bar and I was sitting in a bed of artifacts. Almost every pretty rock was worked. I was amazed.
This is one of those “if you know, then you know” situations. So you shouldn’t chime in when you have no clue what you’re talking about.
Worked artifacts. Once you understand what ground stone tools look like it’s not difficult to identify them. I have numerous artifacts identical to what Brent shows in his videos. Most stone tools are not the highly polished, obvious pieces that are displayed in museums. They’re rough, eroded, simple pieces that aren’t easy for novices to recognize.
They're just rocks, dude.
Yes, they are made of rocks 🪨
Keep your jealousy at homegharr1405
Brent why do you think these are woodland period , when these are paleolithic shapes ? There is much more paleo artifacts than there will ever be in woodland period artifacts . if you had contact info. I could prove it , in Northeastern Ohio we are sitting on a paleo city where it is harder to find a non tooled stone than a Paleo artifact .
@arasethw Some could be Paleo? I have found late Paleo points in this area. What I do know is most of these tools are consistent with agrarian cultures. Most Paleo cultures were nomadic. And lived in small groups. Spaniards were the first to contact this culture, and documented very large, permanent agrarian villages. In fact, the populations were so large, they decided not to take slaves as they originally planned and moved out of the area in fear of being attacked.
@@brentkuehne435 Our Paleolithic folks must not have got your memo , these ancient folks built themselves a sandstone slab City on top of a glacial end moraine ! With a twice documented Mound ,twice the size of monks mound Cahokia ! The site has been a 100+ year cover-up, because these ancient folks were advanced as in miners of coal & clay, makers of fine ceramics, mold blown glass, concrete etc.
Some look like Mammoth herders effigies look for the elephants three stones are mammoth herders stone
Thanks, sir !!! Nice pieces !!!
Brent, I find lots of artifacts that are very similar to yours, but I can’t find any information that gives me an idea of their possible age. Have you found any information that addresses age?
It's hard to say without carbon dating. Much of what I have is late Archaic and Woodland period. So, 2000 BC up to 1000 AD. I'm sure I have some that are older and some as recent as the 1800s. Thanks for the support!
There's no information because they are not artifacts.
@@ericschmuecker348. Did anyone say you could leave your spot in the corner? The smart people are still talking.
@ericschmuecker348 I'm going to make a suggestion that you do a video since you know so much about the subject. We will be waiting.
@brentkuehne435 You said this to others, but you'd never watch it, Brent. People have videos that will help you, and they have nicely told you this, but you are too arrogant to watch. A degree in geography and a course in geology is not helping you.
Why haven't YOU made a video on showing us how they're were made and used! I want you to make one! Carve, peck, grind, polish away, then chop a tree down a tree or grind up some Indian agrigarian foods. Test your ideas!
Your channel is misleading and harmful to artifact enthusiasts.
Nice display
Nice!! Everyone that sees what I have found tell me they're just rocks. Is there a way I can send you a picture of something that I found
They just don’t get it and don’t care to get it. Anyone who has done much artifact collecting will come across at least one of those folks. Don’t give an inch. They’re making an argument from ignorance. Take satisfaction that you have gained knowledge and experience that gives you joy.
There probably are artifacts in your area if you train your eye to ignore weather worn rocks and geofacts.
Well, I really don't have to train my eyes to find rocks 🤔
Unbeknownst to you, Brent is probably one of the more well-known, knowledgeable ground stone artifact collectors around. I’ve yet to come across anyone who has his breadth of knowledge on these type artifacts. Just remember, each time you say, “Those are just rocks,” people with far more knowledge and experience on the subject will hear you say, “I’m ignorant about NA artifacts but I’m going to call you out nonetheless.”
@@brucedawson6991he’s a running joke in my local archeology department, but what do the professionals know about such things?
There are no artifacts here, but it's fun to pretend.
No pretending .
Have you ever been to a museum? These are clearly woodland Indian tools? I've studied 20years the stones are the keepersofthepast. Slow down and look around and learn .
They are definitely artifacts, so no need to pretend
@Cpt.BilboBagginz These are the tools of the permanent agrarian villages, which defines much of the late Archaic and Woodland period. All of these large agrarian villages were on waterways. It was the life blood of their way of life. Many tools were made at the rivers and left there to be used the next day. They were almost never brought to the camp. Generation, upon generation, made tools in the same place on these waterways and just left them there. It's why you find so many in sertent areas.
@@brentkuehne435 that does explain why I see so many at the location. Thanks for the info