Any idea on this bird point?

Tnmountains

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Field find in south east Tennessee.Thought I knew what is was not sure now.
Thank you.
TnMountains
 

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I'm only guessing in scale, pretty small? You refer to it as 'bird point'. The serrated edges suggest small game, even fish. You said, "Thought I knew what is was not sure now." What do you think?
 
I'd say either a hamilton or fort ancient triangle. The term 'Bird point ' is collectors slang, a falsity. That's a true arrowhead point, maybe even a warpoint. Square notched triangles are rare, that's a heck of a find.
 
that is a killer point tn mountain,been around middle tenn? jamey
 
Likely Guy said:
I'm only guessing in scale, pretty small? You refer to it as 'bird point'. The serrated edges suggest small game, even fish. You said, "Thought I knew what is was not sure now." What do you think?
I had thought hamilton at first but the serrated edge kinda threw me off. It was found at a site where hamiltons come from.
thirty7 said:
I'd say either a hamilton or fort ancient triangle. The term 'Bird point ' is collectors slang, a falsity. That's a true arrowhead point, maybe even a warpoint. Square notched triangles are rare, that's a heck of a find.
Thanks thirty7
Square notched triangles are what this area produces. Some square or a little concave. You are right on them being war or fighting points. They are sharp as glass. I think it may be a fort ancient also. It does not seem to fit with my hamiltons. I had not considered fort ancient till I read some post on here and looked up the style and remembered this one. I know we call them bird points but the phrase is kinda hard to break. Thank you for your help.
jamey said:
Haaaa No Jamey have not been to your neck of the woods but seeing your finds I am tempted to make a journey back to my childhood fishing hole for a looksy. Hunted Saturday and someone had beat me to the fields .Found some killer broke blades is all. Mostly woodland sites.
HH
Tnmountains
that is a killer point tn mountain,been around middle tenn? jamey
 
yeah, I kind of misworded that last post, I meant to say the squared serrations on fort ancient triangles, not the base. These squarely serrated ft. ancient triangles are very rare according to Overstreet.
 
thirty7 said:
yeah, I kind of misworded that last post, I meant to say the squared serrations on fort ancient triangles, not the base. These squarely serrated ft. ancient triangles are very rare according to Overstreet.
I have to tell you. I am glad I found this site. I have dug out frames I have not seen in awhile after reading some of these post. Was responding to Jamey on here to see if a broke point had been turned into a scrapper and he said no. i was looking at some stone tools I have and for the first time noticed now get this a broke arrow head turned into scrapper with a flute on one side.Lol I never noticed it before and am sure I have never ever seen anything like it. It has a stemmed base so it does not make sense !!!
I would love the one in the pic to be a fort ancient serrated. They are in this area according to overstreet.
Thank you for your help.
TnMountains
 
That stemmed, fluted , scraper piece your describing sounds to me like a fluted paleo piece reworked by a later culture. One of my hunting buddies found an adena with a 3.5 inch flute on one side, it was most likely a clovis picked up and reworked by adena culture. It's an absolutely stunning point with paleo and woodland flaking.
 
Tnmountains, if I found that point in my area I would definitely classify it as a Ft Ancient Serrated Triangle. Ours are all dated from 950 to 1650 AD on our Ft Ancient sites and I would guess yours is from the same era. Nice point. Thanks for the pictures.
 
Thank you R-t-fact hunter and RobKruzan. I have enjoyed seeing your finds as well. Thank you Dorkfish. Your link that I read on your post made me go back and pull it out and look at it again. I seem to want to identify it or put it with ones like the ones listed posted below. This site is a great learning experience. I appreciate everyones time and experience.
TnMountains
 

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