When simple harpoons were used to hunt whales, for example, the whale was normally killed with a special long lance that they used to spear the lungs or heart.
so would you use a trident to hunt a whale ?
what would be the result of that if you did ?
Your mental processes some times baffle me Steve, you jump from A to D missing out B & C. As I appear to know more about fishing and hunting than you I would not be making any such suggestion. Sorry.
we're not talking modern whaling here are we
we're talking about a time when an ancient vessel was not capable of bringing a dead whale ashore and when the technology to kill a whale outright with a fired harpoon was millenia away
so my question still stands
what would happen if you attacked a whale with a harpoon
what would it do ?
what do injured whales generally do ?
ah i've said too much
I'll shut up now
I can see the piece as being snapped off cleanly as well as seeing it as just snapping off at a weld. The angle for matching up to a center bar is right, at first glance. Also, it just may have snapped at that angle, by chance.
Last edited by Charlie Hatchett on Sat Jan 27, 2007 6:27 pm, edited 1 time in total.
so tell me Charlie
how far is the site you are excavating from any coastline ?
175 nm, currently. Some geologists speculate during the last glacial meltdown, the sealevel bumped right up against the Balcones Faultline. The site I'm investigating, in the scenario just described, would have been right on the coastline. Speaking of, I've got a strange bone I need to post. I'll be working on that.
Charley, this is just an idea. Did your people ever use Oxen as opposed to horses? That MIGHT just be the one half of an Ox shoe.
I'm sure the early settlers (historic) would have used any strong animal.
The hexagonal circumference wouldn't make sense, I don't think?
I would expect a flattened circumference, though I'm not familiar with ox shoeing, Dig.