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Scraper, Stone1-10900

Chip. Locality: Quartermaster Harbor, Vashon Island, Wash. Remarks: Site 11.* Translucent brown color. *Information is from the original accession record.

Material
chert stone
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
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Scraper, Stone1-10889

Chip. Locality: Quartermaster Harbor, Vashon Island. Remarks: Site 13.* Red color. *Information is from the original accession ledger. The following artifacts were analyzed by Elizabeth (Betsy) Scharf, UW archaeology graduate student. 1-10868, 1-10889, 1-10919, 1-10934, 1-10951, 1-11010, 1-11013, 1-11037, 1-11044. Her analysis is described below (August 10, 1999). "I used the SEM and microprobe (xrays emitted from the rock when bombarded with electrons) to analyze the lithics. What I found was that some had small hematite crystals embedded in cryptocrystalline silica. Some samples were just cryptocrystalline silica with no other materials embedded in them. The bulk composition was silica. Of the cations, silica composed 98%, Fe was about 1% overall, and other ions accounted for the rest of the material. (I picked a typical sample -- there is some slight variability). But these samples are VERY siliceous. The texture was microcrystalline, just like chert. One sample had a small piece of a diatom left, so I think these are diatomaceous cherts. I am not sure if they are freshwater or salt, but they must be shallow water since the Fe is red in color (oxidized) like rust. The samples had only trace amounts of magnesium, which to me indicates a freshwater source for the diatoms. I'll vote for eastern Washington, a diatomite area. But I don't know, offhand, of a red one. Perhaps red "opal" or "jasper" is a better term for the material, but "red chert" suits me fine. The "grainy" appearance of some of it is due to little euhedral crystals of hematite growing in some of the background of cryptocrystalline material. Compositionally and microscopically, it fits the green opaline materials I collected from diatomite pits in Grant County. The bulk compostion of the "opals" were 96% Si and 3% Fe, plus trace elements. The only difference was that the opals looked different to the naked eye in color and perceived transluscence. Red obsidian, in comparison, lacks all crystals and contains significant proportions of K, Na and Al. Obsidian= 75% Si, 2% Fe, 8% K, 2% Na, 11% Al. Our samples had only trace amounts of K, Na, Al, Mg, Ca or Ti, so I'd say our samples are NOT volcanic. (So let's rule out the ashes and tephra, too). There's just not enough K, Al, or Na to make feldspars or mica from!"

Material
chert stone
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
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Chipped Stone ToolW3/2/911

Square. Biconvex, brown.

Material
chert stone and pebble
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
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ChopperW1/13/4879

Grey and brown cobble, grey side is flat with around 60% flaked, brouwn side is convex.

Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
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Utilized FlakeW3/10/4098
Chipped Stone ToolW3/3/1088

Thick, planoconvex.

Material
chert stone
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
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GraverW2/7/1568
Scraper, Stone45KI5/18

One brown translucent chert, unifacially flaked, scraper. Artifact labeled "45KI-5, Accs 18/18" Accs 18 refers to a numbering system assigned in the Archaeology Laboratory of the UW Anthropology Department, not the Burke Museum. SKH 2/1/96

Material
chert stone
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
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Utilized FlakeW3/7/1834

Brown, translucent chert with a tan cortex.

Material
chert stone
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
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Utilized FlakeW2/10/2045

Long, translucent brown wilth large eroded inclusions.

Material
chert stone
Holding Institution
The Burke: University of Washington
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