jbl04410
Jr. Member
- Joined
- Feb 11, 2007
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- Location
- Hermon,Maine
- Detector(s) used
- My eagle eyes
Here's a little something from Maine
First of all please excuse my photography skills. Here are a couple interesting things I've found over the last year in maine.
The object on the left was found in a fire ring, I believe it was originally very smooth but due to fire heat damage it was left pitted and course. As to what it is I'm not sure. It's pretty large to be a plummet, but was found near a stream. I'm not ruling out the possiblity of it being a pestle. As for the other object I'm also uncertain of it's purpose. It is fairly long and smooth, but chipped on one end as if being used fairly agressively.
This is a small gouge, it was a surface find on a small sandbar in a stream. Due to it's small size I believe it was used for building poles and housing structures, and fish wiers.
Starting from left to right, broken gouge, Full gouge, probably designed for hollowing logs fairly rugged and a bigger end opening. What I'm calling a wedge as there is no groove on face or end. gouge mentioned previously. next a round ball with percussion marks on the ends. Flat sharpening stone with hollowed end, and grooves due to sharpening. Possibly awls or bone and antler hooks. Small grooveless plummet for fish nets.
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First of all please excuse my photography skills. Here are a couple interesting things I've found over the last year in maine.

The object on the left was found in a fire ring, I believe it was originally very smooth but due to fire heat damage it was left pitted and course. As to what it is I'm not sure. It's pretty large to be a plummet, but was found near a stream. I'm not ruling out the possiblity of it being a pestle. As for the other object I'm also uncertain of it's purpose. It is fairly long and smooth, but chipped on one end as if being used fairly agressively.

This is a small gouge, it was a surface find on a small sandbar in a stream. Due to it's small size I believe it was used for building poles and housing structures, and fish wiers.

Starting from left to right, broken gouge, Full gouge, probably designed for hollowing logs fairly rugged and a bigger end opening. What I'm calling a wedge as there is no groove on face or end. gouge mentioned previously. next a round ball with percussion marks on the ends. Flat sharpening stone with hollowed end, and grooves due to sharpening. Possibly awls or bone and antler hooks. Small grooveless plummet for fish nets.
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