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Offline goldigger
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« Reply #10 on: July 30, 2009, 12:07:43 am »
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farmdigger;

Ayyep! Hard to see but not as small as you would think.

When I was a teenager, at my uncles ranch, all along the edge (river side, any flat, for 3 or 4 miles) of the benches, the chips were so numerous, it was like sand. With grass growing up between the chips. The grass is a vary short kind called prairie wool. It looked as though the knapper would sit, watching the river and the lower flat, while he was working. There were just too many chips to determine where a single knapper had sat. There were even reddened places where there had been numerous camp fires.

The chips were commonly about 3/16 of an inch to  an inch, so they really varied in size, all through the chips, were damaged and discarded pieces. Also, none of the discarded pieces were micro blades. The discarded pieces varied from lance heads (buffalo hunting culture) to bird heads.

BC Hydro owns the property, today, and its leased  by a miserable sob, that wont let anybody in there. Legally, I have Right of Access, but wont push it. It could cause a small war.

I would like to know what culture was there, I do know it was likely NOT Deneh, the heads are wrong and too many different styles, most of which were flint or fine basalt. No obsidian, even though obsidian was mined in the Spatzizi plateau area and traded all over western Canada and the US. The trade route would have been right across these river flats.

If I had a dirt bike, I could sneak in and take pictures... I sure am not going to walk in 5 miles. No, not lazy, diabetic and dont walk well.

I will try to find my meager collection, and photo them.

Brian AKA goldigger





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Offline sarge relics
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« Reply #11 on: December 07, 2009, 03:54:27 pm »
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How do you go about getting your finds authenticated?  Can you give me a procedure or a contact for this?  I surely would be appreciative. 

Thanks,
Danny

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