redbeardrelics
Hero Member
- Jan 3, 2014
- 891
- 1,019
- Detector(s) used
- Garrett GTI 2500, (Ace 250 spare)
- Primary Interest:
- Other
I was able to walk a friends farm 3 times this spring. First after a the initial discing and before planting. Second after planting and the first batch of rains. Third after a heavier round of rain, and before the corn got too high.
Typical finds for this area, mostly brokes, rejects, scrapers, and a few points.
Notes on some of the finds;
#319 a typically crude side notched point of quartz/quartzite, but having some interesting flecks of reflective mica embedded throughout.
#331 would have been nicer if complete, probably a Palmer type with grinding on what is remaining of the base.
#355 is one of the larger quartzite Morrow Mountain types I've found. It was fully exposed and flat out in a row where I could still see my footprints from my first walk, I don't know if I missed it the first time around or not.
#344 would have been a decent Kirk Stemmed type, but the back side has a big fire pop.
#364 is the divoted anvil/grindstone. Found several during these walks, but this was the most defined, and the rest were too far out in the middle of no where to entice me to haul them back to the truck, so I left them where they sat.
#374 I just like the color on this one, a typical late archaic-early woodland Rossville/Piscataway/Morrow Mountain form that is common in my area.
HH to all
Typical finds for this area, mostly brokes, rejects, scrapers, and a few points.
Notes on some of the finds;
#319 a typically crude side notched point of quartz/quartzite, but having some interesting flecks of reflective mica embedded throughout.
#331 would have been nicer if complete, probably a Palmer type with grinding on what is remaining of the base.
#355 is one of the larger quartzite Morrow Mountain types I've found. It was fully exposed and flat out in a row where I could still see my footprints from my first walk, I don't know if I missed it the first time around or not.
#344 would have been a decent Kirk Stemmed type, but the back side has a big fire pop.
#364 is the divoted anvil/grindstone. Found several during these walks, but this was the most defined, and the rest were too far out in the middle of no where to entice me to haul them back to the truck, so I left them where they sat.
#374 I just like the color on this one, a typical late archaic-early woodland Rossville/Piscataway/Morrow Mountain form that is common in my area.
HH to all
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