Making a Hafted Flint Hidescraper

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 25 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 38

  • @UniverseEarthSpirit
    @UniverseEarthSpirit 2 месяца назад +1

    Thank you 🙏🏼

  • @dustandeweese6490
    @dustandeweese6490 Год назад +1

    I have collected several hundreds if not thousands of hide scrapers all from one location and every time I go back I find more an more thanks for the video

    • @pathwaysofthepast
      @pathwaysofthepast  Год назад +1

      You’re welcome! Sounds like a really cool site, maybe one that your local university’s archaeology program might want to check out? I’d recommend reading articles on Google Scholar on the Nobles Pond site. It is a Paleo site in Ohio also with thousands of endscrapers, sites like that can tell us a lot about prehistoric people.

  • @fadeintoyou5341
    @fadeintoyou5341 Год назад +1

    Cool video, well made! And sick demonstration. Love how you keep it 100% primitive

  • @Allen-is7ul
    @Allen-is7ul Год назад +1

    Thank you!!!

  • @canastasiou68
    @canastasiou68 Год назад +1

    Really enjoy your videos. Cheers from Australia.

  • @michaelsewell3706
    @michaelsewell3706 Год назад +1

    Greetings from South Africa 🇿🇦

    • @pathwaysofthepast
      @pathwaysofthepast  Год назад

      Greetings!

    • @michaelsewell3706
      @michaelsewell3706 Год назад +1

      @@pathwaysofthepast I recently picked up a scraper here in South Africa in the Karoo region near a place called Willowmore, a friend at Rhodes University had a look at it and dated it to anything from 15000 to 35000 bc when there was an ice age in that area. Pity we can't post pictures on RUclips. Really enjoy your videos and workmanship.

  • @doylebledsoe7532
    @doylebledsoe7532 Год назад +1

    Just met at the no coin. You’re awesome man, thanks for giving me the knapping stones.

    • @doylebledsoe7532
      @doylebledsoe7532 Год назад

      Could you tell me what they were again? I know the obsidian but the other two I can’t remember

    • @pathwaysofthepast
      @pathwaysofthepast  Год назад

      I’m happy you found me! You’re welcome dude! The white one is Arkansas novaculite and the other is Sonora chert from here in KY!

    • @doylebledsoe7532
      @doylebledsoe7532 Год назад +1

      @@pathwaysofthepast dope thanks brother

  • @Bradmoore1979
    @Bradmoore1979 Год назад +1

    Great job Silas! 👍👍

  • @lancemcilwainoutcastmetald5398
    @lancemcilwainoutcastmetald5398 10 месяцев назад +1

    Would love to watch you make a big pickwick

  • @charlier1977
    @charlier1977 Год назад +1

    Great job.

  • @josephhager1933
    @josephhager1933 Год назад +1

    Love the video I hope you can explore more different kinds of tools in the future, so interesting thank you

    • @pathwaysofthepast
      @pathwaysofthepast  Год назад

      You’re welcome! I really enjoy doing these hafted tool videos so expect more in the future!

  • @mjflinty
    @mjflinty Год назад +1

    Good stuff! Takes me back to when I worked at Nobles Pond and Kent State!

    • @pathwaysofthepast
      @pathwaysofthepast  Год назад +1

      Thank you! Nobles Pond is an awesome site and I’ll definitely feature it in its own video soon! I thought about discussing it in this one but I think it deserves a bit more attention.

    • @mjflinty
      @mjflinty Год назад +1

      @@pathwaysofthepast I spent many summers there in the field and lab. If you'd like to hear more about refitting, end scraper resharpening flakes, or just about the site let me know.

    • @pathwaysofthepast
      @pathwaysofthepast  Год назад

      I absolutely would like to hear more about that! Thanks Michael!

  • @graphiccontent98
    @graphiccontent98 Год назад +1

    Great video man, really informative and really well filmed too, it's great to see this done. Interestingly I found a scraper almost exactly the same as what you made there here in England so it's cool to see how it may have been made and used!!

  • @grantdelrosario5737
    @grantdelrosario5737 6 месяцев назад

    It’s feels crazy that I know some of the people who write your sources

  • @devangrey4376
    @devangrey4376 Год назад +1

    Great video! Always enjoy watching your videos as a fellow knapper. Unrelated question for you. I was wondering if you knew of any indirect percussion techniques that have evidence in the archaeological record besides small bone punches?

    • @pathwaysofthepast
      @pathwaysofthepast  Год назад

      Thanks! Besides small bone and antler punches, I’m not aware of indirect tools that have been found. I’ve seen plenty of authors, especially discussing blade and blade core technologies, cite use of indirect percussion techniques based on the morphology of the blades and flakes they find.

  • @vittalikb4930
    @vittalikb4930 3 месяца назад +1

    would these be used for scraping and shaping wood as well?

    • @pathwaysofthepast
      @pathwaysofthepast  3 месяца назад +1

      Occasionally endscrapers like this have woodworking use-wear on them, so it isn’t unheard of. Though the perpendicular orientation of the scraper to the handle wouldn’t be the best for woodworking, I’d think.

  • @cnawan
    @cnawan Год назад +1

    Well done, you're wonderfully skilled at these recreations :)
    I've seen video of Native American hide scrapers hafted like an adze. I'm guessing an adze arrangement would result in less fatigue and greater control, though I'd rather carry a bunch of the smaller ones a long distance. :) Is there any evidence of either in the archeological record, or does the wood and binding just rot away?

    • @pathwaysofthepast
      @pathwaysofthepast  Год назад

      Yeah a lot of Plains nations used the adze style. Older handles rarely preserve in the archaeological record, the handle of my replica is loosely based off a ~1,500 year old handle from the Canadian arctic/subarctic

  • @JustEditingFUN
    @JustEditingFUN Год назад +1

    Hidescraper? I hardly know her

  • @dirtkickersandarrowheadlic9317

    thats a gunflint

    • @pathwaysofthepast
      @pathwaysofthepast  Год назад +1

      Haha nope! That’s a hidescraper. I might make a gunflint on this channel one day though.