Blade (Archaeology)

In archaeology a blade refers to a thin, straight stone tool that has been struck as a flake from a larger prepared core. Blades are usually made from flint but other materials such as chert are used as the technology existed all over the world and developed from local materials. A traditional rule of thumb is that a blade must be at lease twice as long as it is broad. Blades served as tools and weapon points but were also fashioned into finer burins and scrapers to serve specialised purposes. Sometimes one edge is purposefully blunted by removal of a thin flake on one side to create a backed blade.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
james s. voss
fjords of iceland
charles l. veach
desuetude
roberto vittori
rex j. walheim
n. m. perera
differential
carl e. walz
philadelphi route
alfred worden
ethical pot
differential (mathematics)
gnop!
foot roasting
fine art pot
later qin
peter j.k. wisoff
tablillas
philip h. hoff
eliyahu eliezer dessler
saucer section
stardrive section
1000 words
kagero class destroyer
bbc birmingham
adelphogamy
mary e. weber
mary leakey
juniata
saravali
fyodor n. yurchikhin
flake
golf cart
dorinne k. kondo
uss drum (ss 228)
anna moffo
anne lewinson
james beckwourth
river cover
karl g. henize
william s. laughlin
robert byron
dr. t & the women