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  1. #1
    us
    Land of Jelly Bellies, Home of the Bottom Buddy

    Dec 2007
    The Queen City
    Minelab Explorer II
    589
    Banner Finds (1)

    and this is a KILLER

    Found in Ross Co. Ohio, it is probably a former trophy axe made into a trphy maul. bet this would put a nice quarter sized hole on the cranium. lol
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails and this is a KILLER-p1010037.jpg  

  2. #2
    us
    Dec 2007
    Southeast Ohio
    477

    Re: and this is a KILLER

    Thats a nicely worked piece, did you find that yourself? I work in Chillicothe and do a little hunting there along the river.

  3. #3

    Feb 2007
    Nicholasville, Ky
    883
    1 times

    Re: and this is a KILLER

    Lostlake, you definitetly have some awesome artifacts! Thanks for posting pics!

  4. #4

    Sep 2006
    Central Iowa
    835

    Re: and this is a KILLER

    Wow! Could that be a ridged warclub head?

  5. #5
    us
    Dec 2007
    Cincinnati, Ohio
    519

    Re: and this is a KILLER

    Awesome!
    It's addicting, but it's pleasing!

  6. #6

    Nov 2007
    31

    Re: and this is a KILLER

    Great piece!

  7. #7

    Jul 2006
    Wisconsin
    1,551

    Re: and this is a KILLER

    What an odd and fantastic piece-
    "A culture truly grows great when old men plant trees in who's shade they know they will never sit"

  8. #8

    May 2007
    TX
    1,402
    6 times

    Re: and this is a KILLER

    awesome find,halo 360 i play on line when at home

  9. #9

    Nov 2007
    31

    Re: and this is a KILLER

    Great find. I believe it could have well been the head to a war club, perhaps passed down for generations. I make that speculation because I have seen many authentic Indian clubs of of the post-contact timeframe, and even the wooden ball clubs sometimes featured a 1/2-1" protrusion, because that was a very quick killing design, since a hole was literally punched through an enemy's skull by the club, as if hit by a hammer. Bashing was not enough in warfare where brute strength was the basis. Of course you know the popularity of the tomahawk as a steel tool with Indian design requirements, with the hammer or pipe poll opposite the blade.

 

 

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