Found 30,612 items made of Refine Search .
Found 30,612 items made of Refine Search .
The item search helps you look through the thousands of items on the RRN and find exactly what you’re after. We’ve split the search into two parts, Results, and Search Filters. You’re in the results section right now. You can still perform “Quick searches” from the menu bar, but if you’re new to the RRN, click the Search tab above and use the exploratory search.
View TutorialLog In to see more items.
Stone was club with horn handle. * Ground and battered on one end. Polished on other end. Sides polished near battered end. Tapered (6/95). *Information is from the original accession ledger.
Round sinker or small hand hammer.* Single groove. (6/95). *Information is from the original accession ledger.
Utilization on convex edge.
Retouch on straight edge, notch at base, translucent.
Box of partially worked stones. Locality: Columbia River near Ellsworth. Remarks: 1 traded to CMNH. Number of specimens: Ledger has 1 (48) written in pencil.* *Information comes from original accession ledger.
Small, pentagonal, bifacial, double edge graver. Ridge along center. Dark brown chert.
Stone hammer.* Round cobble, battered on ends. Groove is deeper on one side. (6/95). *Information is from the original accession ledger.
Chip. Locality: Quartermaster Harbor, Vashon Island, Wash. Remarks: Site 11.* Brown, banded chert. *Information is from the original accession ledger.
Stone skin dresser or scraper.* Fide donor GTE: Stone skin dresser. Skin scrapers are found in great abundance about old camps and former living places. They are of various sizes and material. They were of the chipped basalt used for arrow and spear blades; chipped to convenient shape, or of sections of quartzite pebbles split along one face and chipped as required. Some of these were used as hand implements for scraping or softening the skin of the animals of the country, for articles of clothing, while others likewise used were set in the split end of short wood handles and lashed securely by means of hide, root or sinew. They are still used. *Information is from the original accession ledger.