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Found 1,565 Refine Search .
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Edges retouched, brown banded chert. Very irregular flaking.
Ovoid shaped, ground on one edge. Five pieces, glued together, not complete. Bryan calls this artifact an "ulo" Level I.
Pentagonal knife with a deep concave base. Very tip is broken.
Slate fish knife.* Fide donor GTE: Slate fish knife. Fish knives, made of a grey slate more often than black in color, and dug up on old living places and from the sand graves. They are rather longer than wide, and worked down quite thin with a keen cutting edge. I doubt if these were set in a handle as is the case of the woman's knife of the Eskimo, but they seem to have been more on the type of the shell or metal fish knife of the coast. *Information is from the original accession ledger.
Slate fish knife.* Fide donor GTE: Two pieces of slate fish knife. Fish knives, made of a grey slate more often than black in color, and dug up on old living places and from the sand graves. They are rather longer than wide, and worked down quite thin with a keen cutting edge. I doubt if these were set in a handle as is the case of the woman's knife of the Eskimo, but they seem to have been more on the type of the shell or metal fish knife of the coast. *Information is from the original accession ledger.
Brown chert knife, base only, base is concave and thinned; pentagonal.
Fish knife of slate, broken. (sandstone crossed out).* Fide donor GTE: Part of slate fish knife. *Information is from the original accession ledger.
Distinctly heterogenous chert, concave base with one basal edge broken; triangular.
Finely crafted, planoconvex, concave base.
Slate fish knife.* Fide donor GTE: Slate fish knife. Fish knives, made of a grey slate more often than black in color, and dug up on old living places and from the sand graves. They are rather longer than wide, and worked down quite thin with a keen cutting edge. I doubt if these were set in a handle as is the case of the woman's knife of the Eskimo, but they seem to have been more on the type of the shell or metal fish knife of the coast. *Information is from the original accession ledger.