

Moderators: MichelleH, Minimalist, JPeters
Hello Charlie, you going digging today?
Apparently his wife won't let him!
Quite possibly both, Min. The distal end is definitely sharpened, but, with that big of a rock, if someone needed a quick blade, why not knock off a piece...like a core.Again that seems awfully big (and probably heavy) for a hand axe.
Any chance at all that these large pieces were used as miniature 'quarries' to knock off larger chips that could be shaped into smaller tools?
perhaps the trick was getting the weight of the tool to do the work?Minimalist wrote:Again that seems awfully big (and probably heavy) for a hand axe.
why not knock off a piece...
Manystones wrote:perhaps the trick was getting the weight of the tool to do the work?Minimalist wrote:Again that seems awfully big (and probably heavy) for a hand axe.
Hey Many.perhaps the trick was getting the weight of the tool to do the work?
perhaps the trick was getting the weight of the tool to do the work?
Though not discussing hand-axe use per se, it seems the same principles apply.3. Over-estimate the size of the maul so that you do not have to muscle the blow. Knowing what size to use comes only from hands-on experience. By selecting an overly large hammer, your attention can be devoted to just guiding it to the top of the core, allowing it to drop of its own weight. Remember: What you are trying to do is to set up a complex of forces so that they work themselves out in the core. When you try to muscle the blow, at least early on in practice, it could be very dangerous where not only your knuckles but entire hands may discover the acute realities associated with spiral fractures. By holding onto a large maul and allowing it to drop of its own weight on a held core, your muscles will be ready to pull the implement away from the core quicker if/when the strike wobbles the core.
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