Rock Artifact

Sep 20, 2019
42
86
pa
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AT Max
Titan 9000
Garrett / ACE 150
Primary Interest:
Relic Hunting
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Found this rock sitting in a log home slated for demolition. Built in 1750s. Other native artifacts have been discovered here before.

Forgot scale. But its as long as a cigarette lighter. And 3/4 as tall as a lighter.

Super smooth, shiny and flat on the bottom.
Fits beautifully in your left hand.
Staining on the edge of the smooth bottom.
Etches on the top grip at front.
Etches on the rear bottom.

What might this have been used for and by whom?
 

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dognose

Silver Member
Apr 15, 2009
3,049
8,215
Indiana
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Fisher F70
No idea, What is the material? Is this sandstone?

Labelling this as a native American artifact is subjective at best. Since this is not a flaked, pecked or hammered stone relic, to say this was a relic may not be correct.

There has been debate for years that simply due a stone fitting in your hand does not indicate the stone is a native American relic. Sandstone is easily marked.

I think this has a low probability of being a native American artifact.

While attending Catholic grade school in the early 60, we children would bring discarded sandstone bricks from the building of the church and school from the nearby woods and grind into them designs during the recess. 100 years later, finding these in the woods by the buildings may lead one to wrongly associate these also, believe they are artifacts
 

ToddsPoint

Gold Member
Mar 2, 2018
5,352
12,866
Todds Point, IL
Primary Interest:
Metal Detecting
That polished flat surface can't be natural. It's too flat and polished too well. I have no idea what it is. Gary
 

sandchip

Silver Member
Oct 29, 2010
4,351
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Georgia
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Teknetics T2SE
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Slick and interesting. I don't know what it may have been originally or the reason for the marks , but it was kept for some reason, maybe to keep an edge on a pocketknife? Especially if it sits well in the left hand. Also that slight dip in the top in the fifth picture. The small size and overall sheen make me think of it being carried in a man's pants pocket. Daddy had a broken whetstone that he carried, measuring about 3/8 x 2 x 2, just to hit that edge once in a while.
 

OP
OP
Appalachian Woodsman
Sep 20, 2019
42
86
pa
Detector(s) used
AT Max
Titan 9000
Garrett / ACE 150
Primary Interest:
Relic Hunting
I was thinking a whetstone too. The contributor that suggested not calling it native artifacts, I agree and did intend to imply it is. I should have used less suggestive verbage. Native artifacts are found at this site but this tool being found IN the home made me wonder if it was used by early pioneers instead.
 

jamey

Silver Member
Feb 3, 2007
3,069
1,924
Primary Interest:
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i have seen things they call nutting stones with smooth backs.i think they used them to smooth those big blades with
 

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