Could this be a stone tool?

time4me

Bronze Member
Aug 30, 2005
1,296
44
Detector(s) used
E-Trac, Explorer II, Excalibur
A couple of years ago while vacationing on Cape Cod, my family went to visit the natural history museum there, and I saw some stone tools of the earliest inhabitants of the Cape. A few days later, I was out walking with my wife, and I looked down and found a neat looking stone that very closely resembled what I remembered seeing at the history museum.

Could this possibly be an ancient stone tool of some sort?

IMG_2505.jpg


IMG_2504.jpg


IMG_2503.jpg


IMG_2502.jpg


IMG_2501.jpg


IMG_2500.jpg
 

Upvote 0

uniface

Silver Member
Jun 4, 2009
3,216
2,895
Central Pennsylvania
Primary Interest:
Other
It's more than possible. In fact, it is one. Showing (as if does) at least seven removals, all distributed along the same axis, it's outside the parameters of "random chance." But with no idea of what the material is, and what else like it was made and used there, who knows ?
 

Tnmountains

Super Moderator
Staff member
Jan 27, 2009
18,714
11,703
South East Tennessee on Ga, Ala line
🥇 Banner finds
1
Detector(s) used
Tesoro Conquistador freq shift
Fisher F75
Garrett AT-Pro
Garet carrot
Neodymium magnets
5' Probe
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
tough one to tell, Its close in shape like they said~~~~ ?
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Top