Clovis point (chert, 12th century BC or later) from southern Illinois
from here
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from India
seen from Malaysia
seen from Bangladesh
seen from Poland
seen from TĂźrkiye
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Philippines
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from China

seen from Nigeria
seen from United States
seen from Ireland
Clovis point (chert, 12th century BC or later) from southern Illinois
from here
Portalithics hard launch on a Sunday night! This is now the name I'm using for my rock and mineral stuff as well as the synth/new age/ambient music I've previously been making under the name Bognor, which seems inappropriate for the material.
Celebrating with this photo I've taken of an incredible moss agate slice from a nodule I found in the Collawash River with @pnw_rocktography years ago (who I think also made this cut, one of the first rocks I ever got cut). Im oddly proud that it's not edited or even cropped, but art direction was provided by Portalithics TruFanz, so shout out to you guys, all loveđ
Portalithics is a kind of combination of portals, which are cool, and lithics which is a cool word for rocks i think, which are also cool. It could also mean portable stone, or refer to the portamento on a synthesizer (cool), or be a kind of dumb reference to Portland but no probably not that.
Anyways, regards!
Top 5 stone tools (individual tools or types of tools either one works)?
Ooooh. Interesting.
1. 100% grindstones. All types. All in. I ADORE grindstones.
2. Glass Kimberley points (theyâre just SO NICE)
3. Polished ground edge axes. Specifically basalt ones are very nice
4. Leilira knife macro blades are kinda fun.
5. I have a soft spot of horsehoof cores, I think probably because they were the first kind of lithic identification to actually make SENSE to me
Today in class we discussed archaeological evidence of play and learning in childhood flintknapping.
The evidence isn't ideal, and the analysis is complicated, but I love the idea of a roving gang of children of various ages, packing around hammerstones and low-quality knappable stone, leaving little piles of trash wherever they go and hassling every grownup in the village to help them make good tools.
Of moms watching small bits of debris narrowly miss the fish she just filleted and going "you know who's really good at making spears? Your uncle Bob is really good at making spears. Why don't you go ask him and let me cook?"
Of grandparents who aren't up to going out to gather today sitting for hours showing whatever kids are around new ways to make things.
Of circles of skilled toolmakers interspersed with little kids who watch them intensely, making squiggly, probably-not-very-sharp versions of grownup tools, and proudly showing them off, and using them to make more things.
Humans have always been humans, and kids have always been kids.
A little treat from my line of work, found in central Texas. Unfortunately not diagnostic, but if I had to make a guess on age, most likely 400-1000 years old based on size.
Love and stone tools--which lasts longer? Shown with a Clovis type of projectile point/spear. ⢠Millions of unique designs by independent a
This reconstructed biface brought together not just three pieces of a broken artifact but two sites on a northern Wisconsin reservoir as well. Red arrows point out the cracks where the three pieces match up on the two broad sides of the biface. The tip of the biface (to the left of the large double arrow) was found at one site during a survey in 1989, and the two adjoining pieces of the midsection and base (on either side of the small double arrow) were collected from the second site farther east in 2012. The refit indicated a direct connection between the two sites, and they were reclassified as one in the Wisconsin Historical Societyâs archaeological site database. The sites likely were recorded as two separate ones during initial survey in 1989 largely because of higher water levels in the reservoir, which flooded the land between the sites but left two separate rises visible.
Spring 2020 Mixtape.
Lithics âTower Of Ageâ
Self Defense Family âJesus Of Nazarethâ
Clamm âBeseech Meâ
Emily Remler âStrollinââ
Human Impact âContactâ
Bikini Body âHands Offâ
Lana Del Rabies âDarcyâ (Lav Andula RMX)
Tzusing â1976â
Damp âDeath, Sex & Arbyâsâ
Georgia Maq âAway From Loveâ
Es âHidden Trackâ
Mystique âNo Excuseâ
Horse Lords âThe Radiant Cityâ
Giant Swan âThe Rest Of His Voiceâ
Jehnny Beth âIâm The Manâ
Cleaners From Venus âThe Jangling Manâ
Pting âBooâ
Dave East âGodfather 4â (f. Nas)
Editrix âShe Wants To Go And Partyâ
Gang Starr âBad Nameâ
Snarls âWalk In The Worldsâ
Kate Tempest âPeopleâs Facesâ
Shopping âAll Or Nothingâ
Turquoise Days âGrey Skiesâ
Skux âKudisâ
Control Top âBlack Holeâ
Free $$$Â âEtc.â
Serfs, The âCaged And Boundâ
Diat âPositive Energyâ
Milly âTalking Secretâ
Ekambi Brilliant âMother Afrikaâ
M.A.Z.E. âSpread The Germicideâ
Algiers âCan The Sub Bass Speakâ
Future Punx âF Boysâ
Necking âBig Mouthâ
Ganser âPsy-Opsâ
True Dreams âPlease Sirâ
Black Midi âBmBmBmâ
Coriky âClean Killâ
Stardeath & White Dwarfs âWhat Keeps You Up At Nightâ
Autumn âNight In Juneâ
Miserable âLoverboyâ
Districts, The âCheap Regretsâ
Seablite âThere Were Only Shadowsâ
Ing self-titled
Power Alone âSelf Fulfilling Prophecyâ
Algiers âDispossessionâ
Mikey Dread âDread At The Controlsâ
Lithics âHandsâ
Crumb âGhostrideâ
Strobobean âKeep It Togetherâ
Profligate âJet Black (King Of The Road)â
Penelope Isles âRoundsâ
Self Defense Family âVisit Scenic Western New Yorkâ
Serfs, The âPerverted Discoâ
Future Islands âDay Glo Fireâ
Help âPennies On The Groundâ
Nghtcrwler âFirestarterâ
Lisel âDigital Light Fieldâ
Zonal Wrecked
Pete Shelley âHomosapienâ
Miserable âFeverâ
Killing Joke âHollywood Babylonâ
Windy City âI Still Love Youâ