History....

Foxtrot1

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Jacksonville, Alabama
For the vast majority of human existence, feeding your family meant sticking one of these into a large angry animal. A good friend knapped these as a gift. Clovis, Folsom, and some other paleo styles. Holding them is awe-inspiring, realizing how these points were revolutionary in their day. 20260303_171111.jpg

I've never found a paleo point. Have any of you?
 
IMG_7476.jpegI know nothing about arrowheads and have never found one on the east coast (Maryland). I did find this one while out west. I found it near some shavings that made me think it was never quite finished.
 
For the vast majority of human existence, feeding your family meant sticking one of these into a large angry animal. A good friend knapped these as a gift. Clovis, Folsom, and some other paleo styles. Holding them is awe-inspiring, realizing how these points were revolutionary in their day. View attachment 403202

I've never found a paleo point. Have any of you?
Those are nice!
 
For the vast majority of human existence, feeding your family meant sticking one of these into a large angry animal. A good friend knapped these as a gift. Clovis, Folsom, and some other paleo styles. Holding them is awe-inspiring, realizing how these points were revolutionary in their day. View attachment 403202

I've never found a paleo point. Have any of you?
Clovis are large and have a central flute on each side, for attachment as spear heads. Per the archaeological record, most of the largest mammals in North America were extinct within about 200 years of the appearance of Clovis points and the human culture named for them. That means in 200 years this hunting technological leap allowed humans to hunt mastodons, mammoths, camels, short-faced bears, giant sloths, dire wolves, saber tooth cats and others to extinction throughout North America. Climate and other environmental forces doubtless contributed to the rapid mass extinction of North America's largest megafauna. The native wildlife evolved with no experience with human predators, so it is likely Clovis hunters found where they ate and drank, and killed them wholesale without having to chase them. Clovis culture has been unearthed throughout most of what is now the continental United States, as well as in Canada and Mexico. Archaeologists theorize that the smorgasbord provided by Clovis point-tipped spears account for the rapid spread of Clovis culture throughout North America, beginning about 13000 years ago.
 

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