View allAll Photos Tagged flintknapping
Just got around to uploading this shot taken in June 2007. Seeing it now makes me even more impatient for spring.
It's hard to see in the smaller size, but there is a group of children in the center of the shot who have staked out their own spot at the knap-in and are working furiously on their own arrowheads.
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Crafting: Diederik Pomstra
Photo: Karsten Wentink
To license high resolution image, please see www.sidestone.com/about/sidestone-image-licensing
Crafting: Diederik Pomstra
Photo: Karsten Wentink
To license high resolution image, please see www.sidestone.com/about/sidestone-image-licensing
Crafting: Diederik Pomstra
Photo: Karsten Wentink
To license high resolution image, please see www.sidestone.com/about/sidestone-image-licensing
Crafting: Diederik Pomstra
Photo: Karsten Wentink
To license high resolution image, please see www.sidestone.com/about/sidestone-image-licensing
Crafting: Diederik Pomstra
Photo: Karsten Wentink
To license high resolution image, please see www.sidestone.com/about/sidestone-image-licensing
Crafting: Diederik Pomstra
Photo: Karsten Wentink
To license high resolution image, please see www.sidestone.com/about/sidestone-image-licensing
Crafting: Diederik Pomstra
Photo: Karsten Wentink
Uniface bladed knife of the type found in Southwestern Texas. Modern flintknapping work. It's vaguely reminiscent of the ulu of the Eskimos.
To license high resolution image, please see www.sidestone.com/about/sidestone-image-licensing
Crafting: Diederik Pomstra
Photo: Karsten Wentink
Today, I headed over to the Archaeology Lab with Jehan to do crafts like the pioneers! I told her she should have worn her Indiana Jones hat and I could follow her around and hum the theme song.
She was flintknapping and I gathered things to start a fire but was unsuccessful. One day...
March 5, 2011