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|  19th February 2005, 09:55 PM | #1 | 
| Member Join Date: Dec 2004 
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				 |  Something a little different 
			
			It doesn't get much more "ethnographic" than this.  Anyone know what it is?  It is about 4.5" long and a little under 3" wide.
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|  19th February 2005, 11:49 PM | #2 | 
| Member Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: USA 
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			Animal, vegetable or mineral?     | 
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|  20th February 2005, 01:17 AM | #3 | 
| Member Join Date: Dec 2004 
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			What is that, the neolithic precursor to a dha?    I'm trying to decide whether it's stone or copper, or whether I'm totally clueless. Any hints? Fearn | 
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|  20th February 2005, 01:35 AM | #4 | |
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|  20th February 2005, 01:37 AM | #5 | ||
| Member Join Date: Dec 2004 
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   Quote: 
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|  20th February 2005, 03:50 AM | #6 | 
| Member Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: USA 
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			Chert hand axe?
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|  20th February 2005, 03:55 AM | #7 | 
| Vikingsword Staff Join Date: Nov 2004 
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			A tool / axe from lump copper ?      | 
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|  20th February 2005, 04:03 AM | #8 | 
| Member Join Date: Dec 2004 
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			pre-historic axe/knife ?
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|  20th February 2005, 04:22 AM | #9 | 
| Member Join Date: Feb 2005 Location: Clearwater, Florida 
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			dino-poop?
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|  20th February 2005, 04:25 AM | #10 | 
| Member Join Date: Dec 2004 Location: B.C. Canada 
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			Hide scraper Jeff | 
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|  20th February 2005, 05:58 AM | #11 | 
| Member Join Date: Dec 2004 Location: Ann Arbor, MI 
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			Is it signed by Asadullah?
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|  20th February 2005, 02:25 PM | #12 | |
| Member Join Date: Dec 2004 
					Posts: 987
				 |   Quote: 
 It is an Acheulean era hand axe or chopper found along the Omo river in Ethiopia (surface find). This is the same place were the oldest dated remains of Homo sapiens have been found, recently in the news because they were re-dated to 190,000 years ago, which I think 50 or 60,000 years older than originally thought. This piece was not even made by a modern human, but by Homo erectus, somewhere between 1.5 million to 200,000 years ago. | |
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|  20th February 2005, 03:06 PM | #13 | 
| Member Join Date: Dec 2004 Location: Houston, TX, USA 
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			That was my first thought, too, but isn't it small for the type?
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|  20th February 2005, 03:56 PM | #14 | 
| EAAF Staff Join Date: Dec 2004 Location: Louisville, KY 
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			So...I guess that means that it's not Moro.    | 
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|  20th February 2005, 06:02 PM | #15 | |
| Member Join Date: Dec 2004 
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 The more I look at it, the more I think I should give it to a museum, or maybe my alma mater. Its really a priceless artifact. | |
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|  20th February 2005, 06:08 PM | #16 | 
| Member Join Date: Dec 2004 Location: 2008-2010 Bali, 1998-2008 USA 
					Posts: 271
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			Powhatan frisbee     Native american adze/ tool | 
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|  20th February 2005, 06:59 PM | #17 | 
| Arms Historian Join Date: Dec 2004 Location: Route 66 
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			This thread is priceless!!!!! hysterical LOL!!!    Laughter is truly the best medicine!! | 
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|  20th February 2005, 09:09 PM | #18 | 
| Member Join Date: Dec 2004 
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			Interesting!  I had the same "It's a hand-axe, no, wait, it's too small" reaction.   Not that I'm arguing. The one hand axe I got to handle in Anthropology way back when was a bit bigger than my hand, or about twice the size of the example you've got here. It was also right handed, something I noticed as a leftie... Yours is also missing the point that I saw on the other one. Oh well, at least it shows that they weren't standardizing their knives even then   Neat blade! Fearn | 
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|  21st February 2005, 01:41 AM | #19 | 
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			I guessed hand axe first!   It's probably not chert, though.     | 
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|  21st February 2005, 01:57 AM | #20 | 
| Member Join Date: Feb 2005 Location: Clearwater, Florida 
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			My favorite response was: "So...I guess that means that it's not Moro." Priceless!!!! On the serious side, I keep watching as they have to keep going back and revising tool abilities and such, not only on early humans, but proto-humans and even animals. Recent information seems to suggest that we humans may not even have a monopoly on serial killings, with the animal culprit being.....................Flipper!!!!!! Is nothing sacred any longer? Ooops...there goes serious. Sorry | 
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|  21st February 2005, 01:37 PM | #21 | 
| EAAF Staff Join Date: Dec 2004 Location: Louisville, KY 
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			If you want sacred, maybe it is for circumcision.    | 
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|  21st February 2005, 07:05 PM | #22 | |
| Member Join Date: Dec 2004 Location: Ann Arbor, MI 
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				 |   Quote: 
 Andrew, do not have your lawyerly juices getting too hot: even in Ethiopia the statue of limitations is shorter than 2 mln years. | |
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|  21st February 2005, 07:08 PM | #23 | |
| Member Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: USA 
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   (Now Mike, Radu and the rest...    ). | |
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