I’m an American college history professor and am fascinated by this topic. Phil is always a treat to watch…either here or on Time Team. Phil is one of the best human beings ever in my book. Fun story, several years ago, I emailed Phil and he sent a signed photo for my daughter. At 11, she still watches Time Team with me, and that picture still hangs on her wall!
That whole reassembled axe would make such an amazing display piece along with that video, in a museum, or on a tour of museums and classrooms and the like.
Late to the game (as usual), but what really stood out for me are 1) how a "pro" makes it look easy, and 2) the incongruous noise of jets passing overhead while a human makes a stone-age tool :) Well done!
Lovely to see you enjoying yourself with the flint Phil. It is so calming to watch you work. Wish we could get all the old Time Teamers together again. It was a brilliant show every time. Love and best wishes from an Aussie fan.
Phil Harding is the only man on this planet whom can make a simple stick and some stone truly fascinating to me. I love watching him work. His passion for this lost art is infectious.
So cool to watch this in real time and who knows, maybe it'll come in handy one day! Always loved watching Phil learn how to do new things on Time Team and admired how he dove in to give it a try. A true Renaissance Man!
I was 12 when I first saw a sketch of a "Faustkeil" as it's called in German, in my history book. It kept me marvelling for a long time how it was made and how it was used. I'm 61 now and even though I have seen Phil Harding working with flint before, this is the first time I see it made from start to finish. Thank you so much, Phil for so many years finding out about skills and everyday life of long lost times. To me it's still as fascinating as it was for that wee girl living in a rural place in the alpine region of Bavaria. A region formed by the melting glaciers of the Ice Age. We are a "mottly crew" around here, a special cocktail of genes. We have remnants of Celtic settlements and the Roman Road passes right where I grew up. As a kid, I always wondered who lived here before them. Our history lessons gave a very general impression of that period (it was the time when we were still told Neanderthals and other humans of that period were dumb, primitive "one-dimensional" creatures). I'm very glad this has changed. It takes a lot of knowledge and skill to produce flint tools and everything else they needed to survive. It's for archeologists like Phil Harding we have a much better understanding of all this, now although there's way to go. So much more to learn.. Thank you so much, Phil. for the many years on Time Team and for all your great work beside and after the series. ❤Best wishes from the Bavarian mountains (to think the famous Amesbury Archer might very well have come from somewhere around here... 😀)
If only you'd been standing behind my special education students when I taught them to flint knap. They really enjoyed learning and not a single cut finger. I've watched Time Team episodes time and again but just now found this channel. Thank you.
I lived near a reservation in New York state that had a flint outcropping. My late son and I enjoyed finding arrowheads, scrapers and knives, doing some flintknapping experiments. The natives were really a sophisticated society!
the concept of “releasing the ax from the stone”was similar to Michelangelo approach to all of his marvelous his sculptures. David, Moses and the Pieta… Brovo Phil!
Hey Phil, greetings from Australia. 😊 I'm a year into my journey learning Flintknapping I'm finding it a tremendously interesting and satisfying craft. May I thank you for the fascinating video about making your hand axe, the reconstruction of the nodule at the end was wonderful! I didn't know you were a knapper as well mate, you are full of surprises! Take care Phil, and thanks again! Steve
Phil, I watched every time team that was shown. When the series finished it was the saddest day. The loss of Mick Aston hurt. You have got to be the best Napper in the world? You know you might be the only one. Never too old .please make more programs . Phil Jones thanks.
Great demo. I loved the episode when T T was up at that medieval castle near Sunderland and one of the resident historians Robin Bush was explaining the background of the building, and Phil pipes up: "You go back to your books and we'll start diggin." Made my day with chuckles. It certainly showed a contrast in the characters on the show.
I absolutely love Phil Harding, favourite member of time team by a country mile. I can even hear him saying the phrase "by a country mile" as I type it 😂
That is amazing. I had no idea what I was going to see when I started the video. Thank you for sharing that! Can you imagine how good people got when they did that all day, every day for their 20 or 30 years on the earth.
Phil there is something about you. warm fascinating interesting believable, your love of Mapping and archeology portrays no bounds. I can listen and watch you with undivided attention for hours. your amazing!
I have always enjoyed watching you on the Time Team digs. Your enthusiasm for archeology and flint knapping is contagious, and your skills in both are obviously top-notch. But when you showed the nodule reassembled with the hand axe inside, I literally got shivers up my spine... You are one amazing person, Dr. Phil Harding! Thank you for sharing your talents with us!
Just an armchair viewer. You may have lost me a few steps along the way but that is magic! Although when you had the rock puzzle and opened it to reveal the the hand axe, it was a joy to behold! Thank you for putting a smile on my face, again.
Dear Phil, you have amazed me countless times on Time Team when you talked about your trenches to the point that I learn something new almost every time I re-watch. (I'm in my third go round.) I can't tell you how much I admire you, especially with this video. I confess that I've watched other videos about flint knapping, (I'm not a knapper but I'm curious), but none of them made knapping as clear as you have. I watched your hand axe come into being with the same amazement I experienced when I saw the different colours of earth in your trench and understood what they meant in an earlyish episode of Time Team. I agree with Mr. Ray Roberts, I'm sorry I can't hit the like button more than once. Thank you, Friend Phil, and I sincerely hope you make more videos. ;-)
Dear Phil, what can I say that the others haven't already. You have a great and fond view of the ancestors and their skills which you have helped carry through to the present, many many thx
Listening is right. You can hear where the stone is loosening. Geology taught me how flint breaks along lines, which is why you get those thin flakes. A good knapper, like Dr. Harding, can hear and feel where the stone is starting to go.
Phil, I'm a fan. Your INSANE intuition with every trench or test dig all during the 20 seasons of Time Team showed us you ALWAYS knew where to dig as if geophys is built into your brain or something!!! This flint knapping video is GREAT!!! And to show us at the end that the "axe is already in there" was so brilliant I will never ever forget it. Hope to meet you someday... the pints will be on ME to pay you back for all the amazing entertaining lessons I've learned from you over the years! KEEP DIGGIN!
I'm an old timer too. I got into knapping 2 years ago. Only wished I'd have started working rock years ago. I really does help watching your videos. I get frustrated occasionally, mostly from working inferior materials. I've since found a good supply of flint. It's the little differences in angle of strike and amount of force. That's what I see here. Thank You.
Beautifully done! I got goosebumps at the end when Phil shows the flint opening up to reveal the completed hand axe. A perfect teaching tool for the legend of how the axe is already in the stone and the knapper is charged with the responsibility to release it! Thank you Phil and Wessex!!!!
Phil. Sheer raving genius. Loved every second. Ever since i found a complete Cree arrow head in my back yard (!!) I’ve wanted to learn more. You’re the best. Regards from Canada👏👏👏
My son grew up watching Time Team. Every time Phil spoke, he shushed everyone. Glad to say he's a fine knapper, learning from John Lord, but he'd loved the chance to meet Phil. Here's hoping! Massive thanks for this fab video. It's made our week. It's all chert around us, but we'll be knapping it anyway.
Reminds me when I spent a day with John Lord and Val his wife. He talked of releasing the axe from the stone too. I wore safety glasses, he didn't. Told me he knew when to blink. He also described knapping as a blood sport. He was right! We went over to Brandon where he helped me choose a lovely chunk of flint, which I still possess, but dont have the courage to knap it.
I’m another American fan, discovering this show during quarantine and it’s been a godsend. Now I Really Have to visit Britain! (When this covid crap is over of course)
@@kaptainkaos1202 Why won’t your family travel? well. If you’re around Britain at the same time I will be, I’ll meet you for a cup of tea! I’ll most likely be by myself too...I plan on backpacking through a lot of the country, my friends are too ‘posh’ for that lol!
I had the good fortune to meet Phil at stonehenge this August Bank holiday and watch him create an hand axe. He was gracious enough to spend a good while after chatting. Top man and a great video.
Sheer brilliance,Phil hatched a hand axe before our eyes. I hope all the shards of his knowledge are being collected in a blanket to amaze generations to come,and to spawn future Archaeologists.
What I find fascinating is the sound of airplanes in the background... I mean, the good man is making a palaeolithic hand-axe, while the sounds of a machine that is capable of breaking the sonic barrier echo in the background... Simply fascinating...
I was impressed when Phil actually made the hand axe, but when he put it all back together, then revealed the hand axe from the shards, it was amazing. What a brilliant field archaeologist and flint knapper he is.
For many years I believed that all acient tools were made from flint, wood or bone. Ten rectently I discoverd that slate ca be formed into similat tools. Still an excellent flint kanper is amaing to watch. Great video Phil. I hve now added another highly skilled Vloger from the UK to my list. ;-)
I think having a pint with Phil would be a phenomenal experience. Not only does does he seem like a genuinely good person, but the stories and knowledge he has in his head could keep you listening for days.
When I was a post-grad student in archaeology in Dallas, Texas, back in the 70s, my office mate went as part of a small group to continue an archaeological survey of the Negev desert in Israel. He later showed me photos he took of a site he’d come across, which had a large stone that one could sit on and at its base was a partially worked core, a hammerstone, and - arrayed in a fan shape in front of the stone - a series of unused blades, with debitage scattered around the site. Someone had been in the middle of flint knapping, must have seen something or been called away - and never came back. Based on the type of blades, the site where this guy had been working, never to return, was probably from about 20,000 - 25,000 years ago. Who knows, but the site must have been buried and then exposed again, not too long before my friend spotted the dark colored stone on which the knapper had been sitting, clearly visible above the beige desert floor (where did it come from?), because there was no evidence of blowing sand burnishing the artifacts. A site connecting us with a long ago snapshot in time.
"Risk assessment?" RFLMAO! Because of wimps who can't put on goggles, I am grateful, for now I can watch this wonderful video and learn a bit of flint-napping from Phil! Thanks so much for sharing the video, and please send love to Phil from the U.S.!
King Charles first order of business should be to knight Phil Harding. That man is a national treasure to Britain. His passion for archaeology and for flints is quite inspiring. The sparklenin his eye when he showed how he put that nodule all back together was priceless. I love that man.
It's going to be a sad day for the history of knapping when Phil Harding passes he knows more about it then anyone in the last 1 thousand years about shaping and using flint . they could do an entire series of him just sitting in a flint field knapping the days away he would love it and I would watch the shit out of it.
Phil, you are awesome. I've only began watching Time Team and different archaeological programs just recently. My being a pastor and raising kids never let me watch much TV. Thank you for your good heart and spirit and the most interesting things you discover and bring to light! God bless you my friend.
fantistic video. The axe just sort of suddenly appears, even though he is working his way through it the whole time. What a great step back into history.
As a fellow knapper(though I use mostly Obsidian and chert) I've made an entire tool kit out of a piece of Obsidian when my uncle whitehorse was teaching me how to run a trap line. One day he left his knives and belt axe at home and just grabbed a chunk of Obsidian and told me to grab one too. We through some jerky and dryed fruit in our packs and of on a week long Trek. He knew that I wasn't a bad knapper by then and we lived out on a twenty mile mile trap line and using that Obsidian for all our cutting needs. We did well that week. We had a wickiup about every few miles and an Indian pony to Cary our gear. That was the last hunt of the season,. So we broke up the traps packed the furs in a couple a bales and made our way home. That was fourty years ago and I still trap the same ground.
Phil Harding I didn't know the words as I child but you a real calming quality to yourself whilst been able to deliver information/facts on amazing history
While raking behind her home in Clarkston Michigan in the 1970's, my grandmother uncovered a deer sized atlatl Adena point. I have identified it as having come from the lower, smaller surface portion of the Onondaga formation, quite a distance by foot from her home, and positioned perfectly at a hunting ground "bottle neck". She recently passed, and it now belongs to me. They are known for their beautifully refined beaver tail shape.
Best 25 mins of UA-cam in ages!!!
Literally
Ojly 25,000 BC kids remember this
I’m an American college history professor and am fascinated by this topic. Phil is always a treat to watch…either here or on Time Team. Phil is one of the best human beings ever in my book. Fun story, several years ago, I emailed Phil and he sent a signed photo for my daughter. At 11, she still watches Time Team with me, and that picture still hangs on her wall!
That whole reassembled axe would make such an amazing display piece along with that video, in a museum, or on a tour of museums and classrooms and the like.
Perfect Mother's Day morning - cup of coffee & Phil making an axe....marvellous ❤
Unfortunately I can only hit the like button once... wish I could hit it 20 times. The reveal at the end with the reconstructed stone was brilliant.
Yep, I wanted to hit it as often as Phil hit that flint!
I shall hit it once again for you my friend.
you have to turn it around to hit it again 😄
Here, here!
Late to the game (as usual), but what really stood out for me are 1) how a "pro" makes it look easy, and 2) the incongruous noise of jets passing overhead while a human makes a stone-age tool :) Well done!
Lovely to see you enjoying yourself with the flint Phil. It is so calming to watch you work. Wish we could get all the old Time Teamers together again. It was a brilliant show every time. Love and best wishes from an Aussie fan.
Thank you, glad you enjoyed it!
I love Phil!!! I love his enthusiasm, his love for what he does and his sense of humor. OH and his smile and laughter.
Brilliant! He's the David Attenborough of archaeology!
Phil Harding is the only man on this planet whom can make a simple stick and some stone truly fascinating to me. I love watching him work. His passion for this lost art is infectious.
He made it look so easy! But that's what 40 or more years of experience can do. Thanks Phil, much admired and appreciated.
Phil, you are a real treasure. I miss you on the new Time Team.
Phil, you are a modern extension of our very skilled ancestors of old.. Many thanks and cheers ☆☆☆☆
So cool to watch this in real time and who knows, maybe it'll come in handy one day! Always loved watching Phil learn how to do new things on Time Team and admired how he dove in to give it a try. A true Renaissance Man!
I was 12 when I first saw a sketch of a "Faustkeil" as it's called in German, in my history book. It kept me marvelling for a long time how it was made and how it was used. I'm 61 now and even though I have seen Phil Harding working with flint before, this is the first time I see it made from start to finish. Thank you so much, Phil for so many years finding out about skills and everyday life of long lost times. To me it's still as fascinating as it was for that wee girl living in a rural place in the alpine region of Bavaria. A region formed by the melting glaciers of the Ice Age. We are a "mottly crew" around here, a special cocktail of genes. We have remnants of Celtic settlements and the Roman Road passes right where I grew up. As a kid, I always wondered who lived here before them. Our history lessons gave a very general impression of that period (it was the time when we were still told Neanderthals and other humans of that period were dumb, primitive "one-dimensional" creatures). I'm very glad this has changed. It takes a lot of knowledge and skill to produce flint tools and everything else they needed to survive. It's for archeologists like Phil Harding we have a much better understanding of all this, now although there's way to go. So much more to learn.. Thank you so much, Phil. for the many years on Time Team and for all your great work beside and after the series. ❤Best wishes from the Bavarian mountains (to think the famous Amesbury Archer might very well have come from somewhere around here... 😀)
Saving the "waste" was 100% BRILLIANT! Thank you so very much. We love you Phil!
Love the personality. Everyone needs an Uncle Phil.
If only you'd been standing behind my special education students when I taught them to flint knap. They really enjoyed learning and not a single cut finger. I've watched Time Team episodes time and again but just now found this channel. Thank you.
I lived near a reservation in New York state that had a flint outcropping. My late son and I enjoyed finding arrowheads, scrapers and knives, doing some flintknapping experiments. The natives were really a sophisticated society!
a ton of skill to do that Phil. I'd have lost 2 fingers and an eye and had a pile of shards in the end. Well done.
the concept of “releasing the ax from the stone”was similar to Michelangelo approach to all of his marvelous his sculptures. David, Moses and the Pieta… Brovo Phil!
I’ve just found this, my gosh this man’s a treasure, information, inspiration, enthusiasm, thank you Phil !
Phil Harding, you are a man of culture.
Simply amazing, the reveal at the end was something special :) Thank you! Much love to Time Team from the States ❤
I loved the video from the instant the famous hat was placed on the shelf!
I feel like that's engineering of a sort. My mouth is open in awe as I watch.
Hey Phil, greetings from Australia. 😊
I'm a year into my journey learning Flintknapping I'm finding it a tremendously interesting and satisfying craft.
May I thank you for the fascinating video about making your hand axe, the reconstruction of the nodule at the end was wonderful!
I didn't know you were a knapper as well mate, you are full of surprises! Take care Phil, and thanks again!
Steve
Thank you from Wessex Archaeology and Phil, best of luck with Flintknapping!
The only Dr Phil I like. That's for damn sure.
Phil Harding is a National Treasure!
can we say he's a worldwide treasure?
@@jonni2317 Absolutely!
Wow !. What a brilliant man . I could watch and listen to him all day
His enthusiasm is infectious.
Phil, I watched every time team that was shown. When the series finished it was the saddest day. The loss of Mick Aston hurt. You have got to be the best Napper in the world? You know you might be the only one. Never too old .please make more programs . Phil Jones thanks.
Great demo. I loved the episode when T T was up at that medieval castle near Sunderland and one of the resident historians Robin Bush was explaining the background of the building, and Phil pipes up: "You go back to your books and we'll start diggin." Made my day with chuckles. It certainly showed a contrast in the characters on the show.
Excellent Phil!
The ax inside at the end was great.
I'd be one hungry caveman.
My fingers would all be missing or broken.
I absolutely love Phil Harding, favourite member of time team by a country mile. I can even hear him saying the phrase "by a country mile" as I type it 😂
That is amazing. I had no idea what I was going to see when I started the video. Thank you for sharing that! Can you imagine how good people got when they did that all day, every day for their 20 or 30 years on the earth.
Most uplifting thing I've seen in ages 😁
Phil there is something about you.
warm fascinating interesting believable, your love of Mapping and archeology portrays no bounds. I can listen and watch you with undivided attention for hours.
your amazing!
I have always enjoyed watching you on the Time Team digs. Your enthusiasm for archeology and flint knapping is contagious, and your skills in both are obviously top-notch. But when you showed the nodule reassembled with the hand axe inside, I literally got shivers up my spine... You are one amazing person, Dr. Phil Harding! Thank you for sharing your talents with us!
Aw Phil your an absolute legend!
Such wisdom and passion, incredible skill. Well done.
Just an armchair viewer. You may have lost me a few steps along the way but that is magic! Although when you had the rock puzzle and opened it to reveal the the hand axe, it was a joy to behold! Thank you for putting a smile on my face, again.
Dear Phil, you have amazed me countless times on Time Team when you talked about your trenches to the point that I learn something new almost every time I re-watch. (I'm in my third go round.) I can't tell you how much I admire you, especially with this video. I confess that I've watched other videos about flint knapping, (I'm not a knapper but I'm curious), but none of them made knapping as clear as you have. I watched your hand axe come into being with the same amazement I experienced when I saw the different colours of earth in your trench and understood what they meant in an earlyish episode of Time Team. I agree with Mr. Ray Roberts, I'm sorry I can't hit the like button more than once. Thank you, Friend Phil, and I sincerely hope you make more videos. ;-)
I've seen this series probably 5 times, will be 20 before I go
Phil Harding is great! I love that man. He is wonderful to watch. Thank you Phil!
I too am in love with the Neolithic age. I am going to give making flint tools a try. Thank you for this thorough explanation!
i am glad you are. What Phil is making, at least at the start, is of course from the Paleolithic age.
What an explicitly professional Philip Harding was then, is now, and ever will be...! 'Crackin'...!
Dear Phil, what can I say that the others haven't already.
You have a great and fond view of the ancestors and their skills which you have helped carry through to the present, many many thx
Phil, thank you this. On my back hospital, made my day. God Bless you from the U.S.
This video is easily on the top 10 of videos I have seen on UA-cam.
Informative, entertaining, exiting & with an amazing conclusion.
I think I could learn just about anything from Phil Harding. An effortlessly enthusiastic student and teacher.
Why was I so mesmerized by watching a man make a flint axe? :)
Wonderful half an hour.
Because you were watching Phil. He is a master flint knapper and a born teacher. His enthusiasm and love for what he does is fascinating.
Phil ceremoniously placing his trademark hat on the shelf…❤️❤️❤️
An education and an entertainment - I'm going to have a go at that. The "axe within" was a brilliant touch. Many thanks.
Listening is right. You can hear where the stone is loosening. Geology taught me how flint breaks along lines, which is why you get those thin flakes. A good knapper, like Dr. Harding, can hear and feel where the stone is starting to go.
One of the best 26 minutes I’ve ever spent. Thank you!
Thank you Phil, it is always a pleasure to see and hear what you have going on each episode, no mater what. 30 minutes well spent!
I find Phil's accent endlessly charming.
Everything about Phil is endlessly charming?
Phil, I'm a fan. Your INSANE intuition with every trench or test dig all during the 20 seasons of Time Team showed us you ALWAYS knew where to dig as if geophys is built into your brain or something!!! This flint knapping video is GREAT!!! And to show us at the end that the "axe is already in there" was so brilliant I will never ever forget it. Hope to meet you someday... the pints will be on ME to pay you back for all the amazing entertaining lessons I've learned from you over the years! KEEP DIGGIN!
I'm an old timer too. I got into knapping 2 years ago. Only wished I'd have started working rock years ago. I really does help watching your videos. I get frustrated occasionally, mostly from working inferior materials. I've since found a good supply of flint. It's the little differences in angle of strike and amount of force. That's what I see here. Thank You.
I too am learning "the satisfaction"! Rock on Phil!
Beautifully done! I got goosebumps at the end when Phil shows the flint opening up to reveal the completed hand axe. A perfect teaching tool for the legend of how the axe is already in the stone and the knapper is charged with the responsibility to release it! Thank you Phil and Wessex!!!!
Phil. Sheer raving genius. Loved every second. Ever since i found a complete Cree arrow head in my back yard (!!) I’ve wanted to learn more. You’re the best. Regards from Canada👏👏👏
My son grew up watching Time Team. Every time Phil spoke, he shushed everyone. Glad to say he's a fine knapper, learning from John Lord, but he'd loved the chance to meet Phil. Here's hoping! Massive thanks for this fab video. It's made our week. It's all chert around us, but we'll be knapping it anyway.
why doesn't your son contact Phil?
He seems like the person who loves meeting like minded people.
I'm sure he can be contacted through the university.
Absolutely magical to watch the process. Phil as a master artisan. The finale of all the bits together was brilliant.
One of the best videos I have seen and have never seen a flint put back together thanks
Beautiful video with a beautiful and unexpected ending. Thanks so much. 😃
I love this man and I think the ancients do too.
fantastic ... picking up a stone, seeing the possible blade inside, and just "freeing" it in ... 20 minutes.
Reminds me when I spent a day with John Lord and Val his wife.
He talked of releasing the axe from the stone too. I wore safety glasses, he didn't. Told me he knew when to blink.
He also described knapping as a blood sport. He was right!
We went over to Brandon where he helped me choose a lovely chunk of flint, which I still possess, but dont have the courage to knap it.
Phil you are a snapping genius, I love this video and despite the warning I am off to try and make one myself!
You’re one of the most interesting men I’ve ever watched. Phil Harding the Rock Star! So happy you are still sharing what you know! Love USA fan
I’m another American fan, discovering this show during quarantine and it’s been a godsend. Now I Really Have to visit Britain! (When this covid crap is over of course)
@@mamavswild same here! Darn this COVID. Only problem for me is no one in my family will travel so I’ll be by myself. Hope you have more luck!
@@kaptainkaos1202 Why won’t your family travel? well. If you’re around Britain at the same time I will be, I’ll meet you for a cup of tea! I’ll most likely be by myself too...I plan on backpacking through a lot of the country, my friends are too ‘posh’ for that lol!
What a guy , thank you Phil for the master class most interesting, I love how you can read the flint x
This is a true master, a depository of lost knowledge and wisdom. We need more like him.
Just a few days away from Phil's 74th birthday. January 25, 2024. He is wonderful teacher and the best man in the world.
I had the good fortune to meet Phil at stonehenge this August Bank holiday and watch him create an hand axe. He was gracious enough to spend a good while after chatting. Top man and a great video.
So blessed..what a day that must have been.
Sheer brilliance,Phil hatched a hand axe before our eyes. I hope all the shards of his knowledge are being collected in a blanket to amaze generations to come,and to spawn future Archaeologists.
👍👏👏👏👏
What I find fascinating is the sound of airplanes in the background... I mean, the good man is making a palaeolithic hand-axe, while the sounds of a machine that is capable of breaking the sonic barrier echo in the background... Simply fascinating...
Honestly that's my favorite thing, a mix of the modern and the old. What better way to symbolise that then the distant sound of air craft?
@@Will_The_Walnut My thoughts exactly!
I was impressed when Phil actually made the hand axe, but when he put it all back together, then revealed the hand axe from the shards, it was amazing. What a brilliant field archaeologist and flint knapper he is.
For many years I believed that all acient tools were made from flint, wood or bone. Ten rectently I discoverd that slate ca be formed into similat tools. Still an excellent flint kanper is amaing to watch.
Great video Phil. I hve now added another highly skilled Vloger from the UK to my list. ;-)
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, Phil!!! Hope you're having a GREAT one!!!❤❤❤❤
Phil, you are a great teacher and an inspiration. Don’t ever lose your sense of humor or depth of inquiry.
I think having a pint with Phil would be a phenomenal experience. Not only does does he seem like a genuinely good person, but the stories and knowledge he has in his head could keep you listening for days.
My wife and I plan to do just that, the next time we are in the area.
When I was a post-grad student in archaeology in Dallas, Texas, back in the 70s, my office mate went as part of a small group to continue an archaeological survey of the Negev desert in Israel. He later showed me photos he took of a site he’d come across, which had a large stone that one could sit on and at its base was a partially worked core, a hammerstone, and - arrayed in a fan shape in front of the stone - a series of unused blades, with debitage scattered around the site.
Someone had been in the middle of flint knapping, must have seen something or been called away - and never came back. Based on the type of blades, the site where this guy had been working, never to return, was probably from about 20,000 - 25,000 years ago.
Who knows, but the site must have been buried and then exposed again, not too long before my friend spotted the dark colored stone on which the knapper had been sitting, clearly visible above the beige desert floor (where did it come from?), because there was no evidence of blowing sand burnishing the artifacts.
A site connecting us with a long ago snapshot in time.
That’s an amazing story.
Thankyou Phil...for this and your lifetime body of work.
"Risk assessment?" RFLMAO! Because of wimps who can't put on goggles, I am grateful, for now I can watch this wonderful video and learn a bit of flint-napping from Phil! Thanks so much for sharing the video, and please send love to Phil from the U.S.!
They would probably just have bothered him and we would not have had the opportunity to hear his uninterrupted thought process.
King Charles first order of business should be to knight Phil Harding. That man is a national treasure to Britain. His passion for archaeology and for flints is quite inspiring. The sparklenin his eye when he showed how he put that nodule all back together was priceless. I love that man.
Phil needs his own UA-cam channel! This is not a request but a demand!
Great video Phil 30min of mesmerising film. In these difficult times I hope you are doing ok Have a beer Cheers
It's going to be a sad day for the history of knapping when Phil Harding passes he knows more about it then anyone in the last 1 thousand years about shaping and using flint . they could do an entire series of him just sitting in a flint field knapping the days away he would love it and I would watch the shit out of it.
I imagine phil hovering over archaeological digs yelling at people
Oh Great King Flint Knapper and Archaeologist, Live Forever.
Love u Phil, my Time Team hero for decades :-) x
Phil, you are awesome. I've only began watching Time Team and different archaeological programs just recently. My being a pastor and raising kids never let me watch much TV. Thank you for your good heart and spirit and the most interesting things you discover and bring to light! God bless you my friend.
Now, that's entertainment! Phil just has a knack for explaining things.
That was mesmerizing, Dr.! Greetings and admiration from Indiana, USA 👍
fantistic video. The axe just sort of suddenly appears, even though he is working his way through it the whole time. What a great step back into history.
Fantastic to see Mr Harding is doing well and knapping away! Hope to see you on the new Time Team gathering! Stay well!
Unbelievable skill level here and great teaching style! Dr. Phil Harding never disappoints. Thank you so much!
As a fellow knapper(though I use mostly Obsidian and chert) I've made an entire tool kit out of a piece of Obsidian when my uncle whitehorse was teaching me how to run a trap line. One day he left his knives and belt axe at home and just grabbed a chunk of Obsidian and told me to grab one too. We through some jerky and dryed fruit in our packs and of on a week long Trek. He knew that I wasn't a bad knapper by then and we lived out on a twenty mile mile trap line and using that Obsidian for all our cutting needs. We did well that week. We had a wickiup about every few miles and an Indian pony to Cary our gear. That was the last hunt of the season,. So we broke up the traps packed the furs in a couple a bales and made our way home. That was fourty years ago and I still trap the same ground.
That's excellent. 👍
Amazing ending to a great beginning! Phil is the best TV presenter out there. You can't help but like the bloke 👍
Phil Harding I didn't know the words as I child but you a real calming quality to yourself whilst been able to deliver information/facts on amazing history
While raking behind her home in Clarkston Michigan in the 1970's, my grandmother uncovered a deer sized atlatl Adena point. I have identified it as having come from the lower, smaller surface portion of the Onondaga formation, quite a distance by foot from her home, and positioned perfectly at a hunting ground "bottle neck". She recently passed, and it now belongs to me. They are known for their beautifully refined beaver tail shape.
Thank you so much for sharing this. I could watch Uncle Phil knapp all day long. Truely, thanks! Stay safe ya'll.