Stacking

mainejman

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Sep 2, 2012
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Found this little point yesterday...pretty good example of stacking I'd say...mjm IMAG1489.jpg
 

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rock

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Does it even look like they tried to remove it or just worked around it?
 

crj1968

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Maybe there's a reason for it? Balance?
 

Buckleberry

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Sep 4, 2010
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Yeah, pretty cool, like a micro cliff face on that one...knives didn't need to be aerodynamic...
 

crj1968

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To hard to remove them stacks. I bet they are like a knot in a board.

I see. Thanks. I've recently tried knapping myself....so far I've learned that it is much harder than I thought it would be
 

sandchip

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It's where a blow to remove a flake is insufficient to remove the unwanted part of a preform in the reduction process. After that, regardless of the amount of force applied, the next blow will travel up to that point and hinge out, and the next, and the next, until when viewed from the side, the hinge fractures sorta look stacked one on top of each other.
 

Jon Stewart

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Jan 11, 2011
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They can be removed if you approach the rock from different angles but it takes time to learn that process. I would think the Natives had better things to do, lol.
 

monsterrack

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Some stacks are caused by a spot in the stone like a fossil or any type of infusion of a different material. To take off a flake from the stone you strike it at a edge point and the shock wave goes across the stone making a flake fall off. To high with your strike and you get a stack, to low and the flake will be short. Jon is right you have to remove it from another angle, I always do it from the other side of the stone.
 

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