Cache the only true one I have found

Tnmountains

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Location
South East Tennessee on Ga, Ala line
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Detector(s) used
Tesoro Conquistador freq shift
Fisher F75
Garrett AT-Pro
Garet carrot
Neodymium magnets
5' Probe
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
August 6th,2006

I was on a waterway here in Tennessee. It was an early morning and the fog was still hanging on. I was :walk: along the water watching two fishermen drift by. They were close and I said hello and we talked about fishing as fishermen do . I looked down and saw under a large root ball a piece of brown flint. I was getting excited but had to keep talking as they drifted by. Once they disappeared into the fog I backed up and knelt down and looked under the tree root. The following items had released themselves from the roots and were all lying together in the sand. I was a happy puppy. Of course I wanted more but further search revealed nothing else. This trip was by canoe and when we went to leave my paddling partner set down on a rock they had placed in their seat and bolted upright. I was already in the back of the canoe(drivers seat) and the canoe was going over no matter what I did. The front of the canoe was in a foot of water the back was over the channel in 20 feet of water. I was drove down into the depths before I knew it. All I could think of was the points in the cooler. I saw daylight and surfaced swam and saved them but we lost fishing rods gear and who cares what else cause I saved the points again. My paddling partner was standing in a foot of water. : )
I consider these a true cache as they were all together touching and similar items probably made by the same person. No bone or pottery were seen with these items. They were "almost" in context considering their short drop out of the tree root.
The blades are Fort Payne Chert the preform uni platter/scrapper is from horn stone.
I have never settled on a type for these. At first I thought Copena or possibly Tennessee River Knifes. I have also been told and seen pictures of identical paleo blades of same material from this area but am not convinced. The flaking comes to the center in one strike with no secondary blade work. To me it was just a fun memorable hunt. None are perfect no monetary value here but they are real and found by me. Thanks for letting me ramble and share some of my old finds.
Any advice is as always welcome.
HH
TnMountains
:icon_sunny:
 

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Brother....... what a great story and an unbelievable find!!!!!! You had me on the edge of my seat when the canoe dumped you!!!! Thank God you save these beauties!!! Yea... I agree with Blind Pig. We should all give detail to our finds. Thanks for the great read and awesome pics.
 
Tn.Mtns, those are great!!! I would have to guess early Archaic by the flaking. If they were Copena connected, I would say they would be MUCH thinner and exibit better concentration on their edgework. The large percussion scars tell me early Archaic. Stan
 
stansknives said:
Tn.Mtns, those are great!!! I would have to guess early Archaic by the flaking. If they were Copena connected, I would say they would be MUCH thinner and exibit better concentration on their edgework. The large percussion scars tell me early Archaic. Stan

Stan we are thinking Tn River knifes. You are right. The copenas I have are much thinner and have the secondary work along the edges. Here is a copena from the same area. When you move these will be from your new hunting area. hehe :thumbsup:
 

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TN, love the story behind the finds, it makes the finds that much better. It's nice to get some detail on the artifacts found BTW, it gets your imagination stirring a little. I have this weekend to hunt, and it's gonna be a nice day tomorrow. Gonna take the YAK down the Colorado River to find some flint. Hope i dont have a tip over, hahaha. Well, thanks for the story, and beautiful finds man.
 

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