I think it's because New England has no flint. The residents can't get a start arrowhead hunting because there's no arrowheads made from flint. They desperately want to find points and just grasp at anything but there is little there to find. Just granite rocks. They all need to relax and take a vacation to the Midwest where the arrowheads live.
I heard a song once... "no one told you when to run, you missed the starting gun." Gary
Lol. I'm not sure if you're just being sarcastic, but this is a generalization that simply is not true. It's true that we are not rich in the flints other regions enjoy, but we are hardly berift of "little to find" and we do have many nice rhyolites. Even our own source of jasper in Limerock, RI. And, FYI, flints in northern New England.
So, permit me to correct your false assumptions. Everything seen here was found in RI, which is a New England state.
Personal finds consisting of several varieties of flint, most from NY, and commonly found here, jasper, from both Pa and RI, many regional rhyolites, quartz, quartzite, argillite, and hornfels:
Chalcedony, source is in Limerock, RI:
Hingham Rhyolite, sourced in the Boston area:
Vinelhaven Rhyolite, sourced in coastal Maine:
A RI frame at the Robbins Museum in Middleborough, Ma. The largest points are in the 5+ inch range. Many nice lithics seen here:
I have long been of the opinion that collectors learn to appreciate and enjoy the lithics common to their own region. Although I would always like to find more flint, I truly like some of my own region's rhyolites more then many flints.