Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-mkpzs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T20:15:38.370Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Prismatic Blade Replication

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Abstract

A series of experiments to replicate prismatic blades with use of direct percussion, indirect percussion, and pressure techniques are discussed. Similar prismatic blades can be produced by a number of techniques and comparison is made with blades from some archaeological sites in Texas. It is suggested that Paleoindian blade technology employed direct percussion exclusively, and later small blade technologies used other techniques as well.

Type
Reports
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for American Archaeology 1976

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Adovasio, J. M., Gunn, J. D., Donahue, J., and Stuckenrath, R.. 1975 Excavations at Meadowcroft Rockshelter, 1973-1974: a progress report. Pennsylvania Archaeologist 45(3):1-30.Google Scholar
Anderson, D. D. 1970 Akmak. Acta Arctica, Fasc. 16, Copenhagen. Google Scholar
Bordaz, J. 1970 Tools of the old and new stone age. Natural History Press, New York.Google Scholar
Borden, C. E. 1969 Early population movements from Asia into western North America. Syesis 2(1,2):1-13.Google Scholar
Bordes, F. 1968 The old stone age. McGraw-Hill, New York.Google Scholar
Bordes, F. 1969 Reflections on typology and techniques in. the Paleolithic. Arctic Anthropology 6(1): 1-29.Google Scholar
Bordes, F., and Crabtree, D. E. 1969 The Corbiac blade technique and other experiments. Tebiwa 12(2):1-21.Google Scholar
Coles, J.M., and Higgs., E.S. 1969 The archaeology of early man. Praeger, New York.Google Scholar
Converse, R. N. 1973 Ohio flint types. Archeological Society of Ohio, Special Publication. Google Scholar
Crabtree, D. E. 1968a Edge-ground cobbles and blade making in the Northwest. Tebiwa 11(2):50-58.Google Scholar
Converse, R. N. 1968b Mesoamerican polyhedral cores and prismatic blades. American Antiquity 33:446-78.Google Scholar
Ford, J. A., Phillips, P., and Haag, W. G. 1955 The Jaketown site in west-central Mississippi. American Museum of Natural History, Anthropological Papers 45, Part 1.Google Scholar
Giddings, J. L. 1964 The archeology of Cape Denbigh. Brown University Press, Providence.Google Scholar
Green, F. E. 1963 The Clovis blades: an important addition to the Llano complex. American Antiquity 29:145-65.Google Scholar
Hammatt, H. H. 1969 Paleo-lndian blades from western Oklahoma. Texas Archeological Society Bulletin 40:193-98. Hester, T. R., and Heizer, R. F. 1973 Bibliography of archaeology Vol. J: experiments, lithic technology, and petrography. Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA.Google Scholar
Kraft, H. C. 1973 The Plenge site: a paleo-lndian occupation site in New Jersey. Archaeology of Eastern North America 1(1):56-117.Google Scholar
MacNeish, R. S. 1964 Investigations in southwest Yukon. Peabody Foundation Papers 6(2).Google Scholar
Montet-White, A. 1968 The lithic industries of the Illinois valley in the Early and Middle Woodland period. University of Michigan Museum Anthropological Papers 35.Google Scholar
Morse, D. F. 1974 The Cahokia microlith industry. Newsletter of Lithic Technology 3(2).15-19.Google Scholar
Morse, D. F., and Tesar, L. D. 1974 A microlithic tool assemblage from a northwest Florida site. Florida Anthropologist 27(3):89-106.Google Scholar
Patterson, L. W. 1973a Far Northern influences on the upper Texas coast. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting, Texas Archeological Society, Lubbock.Google Scholar
Patterson, L. W. 1973b Some Texas blade technology. Texas Archeological Society Bulletin 44:89-111.Google Scholar
Patterson, L. W. 1974a Technological changes in Harris County. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting, Texas Archeological Society, Dallas.Google Scholar
Patterson, L. W. 1974b A multiple rock midden site. La Tierra 1(3):10-13.Google Scholar
Patterson, L. W. 1975 A quarry site in Medina County. La Tierra 2(1):19-23.Google Scholar
Pitzer, J. M., Hester, T. R., and Heizer, R. F. 1974 Microblade technology of the Channel Islands. The Masterkey 48(4): 124-35.Google Scholar
Prideaux, T. 1973 Cro-Magnon man. Time-Life Books, New York.Google Scholar
Sanger, D. 1968 Prepared core and blade traditions of the Pacific Northwest. Arctic Anthropology 5(1):92-120.Google Scholar
Sanger, D., McGhee, R., and Wyatt, D. 1970 Appendix 1: blade description. Arctic Anthropology 7(2):115-17.Google Scholar
Smith, J.W. 1974 The northeast Asian-northwest American microblade tradition. Journal of Field Archaeology 1:347-64.Google Scholar
Taylor, W. E. 1962 A distinction between blades and micro-blades in the American arctic. American Antiquity 27:425-26.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
West, F. H. 1973 Late Paleolithic cultures in Alaska. Paper presented at the 9th International Congress of Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences, Chicago.Google Scholar