Thoughts?

CHUDs

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Feb 13, 2014
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I found these at a turned over field near my home. The curved piece seems shaped like and abrader of sorts but I don’t know...The second piece is very polished and is broken on the back...not sure but I feel it is definitely an artifact. I’m going to clean them up a bit and post fresh pics. As always, thanks.



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mirage83

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My non-professional opinion on those pieces is that they're naturally shaped stones rather than tools.
 

Tnmountains

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Hey Chud. They appear to be natural and not worked. Did you find any other debatage or worked flakes? The kind of thing I also pick up and inspect then toss back down saying bummer, Lol.
 

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CHUDs

CHUDs

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It’s a site...there were work flakes all over. The polish on the round piece caught my eye and the shape of the curved piece...no other stones either. I’ll stick em outside! Thanks!
 

Tnmountains

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It’s a site...there were work flakes all over. The polish on the round piece caught my eye and the shape of the curved piece...no other stones either. I’ll stick em outside! Thanks!

You will pull some stuff out of there.
 

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CHUDs

CHUDs

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I already have...just interested in these 2 that kinda caught my eye!
 

joshuaream

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From your other posts you obviously find some relics, so if they are smoothed or feel unnatural, they are probably fractured grinding stones of some sort. Between piñón nuts in the hills, other types of nuts, and the massively important acorn harvest, groups in California pounded and ground a lot of their calories.
 

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CHUDs

CHUDs

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When I first saw the side of the polished one I thought a celt? But I’m not sure the natives had much in the way of hardstone tools beyond acorn grinders and hide softeners. Does anyone know if there was native woodworking tools like celts in CA? Thanks for everyone’s input.
 

ptsofnc

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Is it polished, or fractured water smoothed cobble? Either way, if you're finding points and flakes in the same area, there is a good possibility it was fractured by the hand of man. Sometimes we cannot know with certainty. I for one was not there. You'll get different opinions here...which are all good.
 

jamus peek

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What up Chud. That second piece looks polished to me. Here is a celt. I hope some of these pics shed some light on artifacts from our area. It is a unique hardstone in which can be flaked and pecked and ground. One beveled side is pecked and the other is flaked or chipped.These are creek finds on private property.
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Here are a couple discoidal's
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One is sandstone quartz and the other is blue schist. I believe they are gamestones biscuit type. Here's one found made of brick probably made in the 1800s.
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Some of our wood working tools take on a different shape then what you see online. For the most part we have more adzes then Celts. Grooved axes are around. I'll post one here soon. At the bottom im not sure if the grooved charmstone came out. What is most plentiful are charmstone they are each uniquely shaped so much as so they would be hard to categorize.
 

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CHUDs

CHUDs

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I’ve definitely found grinding stones made out of the same material as the discoidals. It seems to be plentiful in the Santa Cruz Mountains.
 

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