I once excavated a pit house floor 2,000 years old, with a debitage scatter that had literally just been swept into a pile next to the hearth perfectly preserved. Three hammerstones sat two feet away. The river next to it had flooded across the flat and berried the floor in a foot deep layer of silt. Nice work and presentation.
How to flute a Clovis Point without breaking it: Take two slats of oak, shaped like they are cut out of a yard stick 10 to 12cm long. Pitch glue two buttons of wood to one end of each, four buttons total. wrap the tip of your Clovis preform in a one inch strip of buckskin/leather twice around. Wrap the two boards onto the point with the tip sandwiched flat and the buttons at the base, with a piece of string or cordage. Flute with an antler billet, works every time. Good luck everyone!
Fulsom culture after clovis they were a later culture that were hunting bisons the kill sites had many fulsom point john look in the fulsom kill sites on the youtube you may find this to be very interesting
The settlements remind me of mud huts formed with grass and clay mixxed there would been post holes as well the roofs were used with a grass and sticks and would had kept the in side of these huts warm it would not been full of smoke the smoke would gone above to these roofs. going through these roofs snow would have mostly turned in water but would not cave in they always knew how to thicken the rooves so it would not weight the structural roofs . adding making the clay to thicken these walls as well as a insulation that is most likely. they were common used in many cultures some may had a stone bottom stone structures i had not seen of these bottom structure just old fire pits some with the figure 8 one circle with a half circle connect to the fire pit even dug in these circles found flaking and projectile points these fire pits are found near water and old ravines were there is a settlement or camp there found near water look for those ravines there is more artifacts and hunters following water that is very used for hunting and drinking and hunting these grasslands for bison we know there was a major change in the climate that made had caused these people to move from place to place this is very interesting lecture she needs to work with dennis stanford the living structural life styles remind me of the European and other life styles i seen in other countries we know fulsom is a later culture the kill sites were mostly consist of bison the mammoth was extinct during this time the bison were much bigger during this time so the points shrunk in size not as big as the points that kills mammoths the flutes never really changed much
I once excavated a pit house floor 2,000 years old, with a debitage scatter that had literally just been swept into a pile next to the hearth perfectly preserved. Three hammerstones sat two feet away. The river next to it had flooded across the flat and berried the floor in a foot deep layer of silt. Nice work and presentation.
Who is this woman ❤❤❤
How to flute a Clovis Point without breaking it: Take two slats of oak, shaped like they are cut out of a yard stick 10 to 12cm long. Pitch glue two buttons of wood to one end of each, four buttons total. wrap the tip of your Clovis preform in a one inch strip of buckskin/leather twice around. Wrap the two boards onto the point with the tip sandwiched flat and the buttons at the base, with a piece of string or cordage. Flute with an antler billet, works every time. Good luck everyone!
I love this stuff, I should have been a archeologist or a anthropologist instead of a dam plumber 😏
Haha you can still learn all about these cultures at least, the world needs plumbers too
Nobody finds artfacts on flat ground typically hunters look on hills or knolls or high banks
who are these people?
Fulsom culture after clovis they were a later culture that were hunting bisons the kill sites had many fulsom point john look in the fulsom kill sites on the youtube you may find this to be very interesting
The settlements remind me of mud huts formed with grass and clay mixxed there would been post holes as well the roofs were used with a grass and sticks and would had kept the in side of these huts warm it would not been full of smoke the smoke would gone above to these roofs. going through these roofs snow would have mostly turned in water but would not cave in they always knew how to thicken the rooves so it would not weight the structural roofs . adding making the clay to thicken these walls as well as a insulation that is most likely. they were common used in many cultures some may had a stone bottom stone structures i had not seen of these bottom structure just old fire pits some with the figure 8 one circle with a half circle connect to the fire pit even dug in these circles found flaking and projectile points these fire pits are found near water and old ravines were there is a settlement or camp there found near water look for those ravines there is more artifacts and hunters following water that is very used for hunting and drinking and hunting these grasslands for bison we know there was a major change in the climate that made had caused these people to move from place to place this is very interesting lecture she needs to work with dennis stanford the living structural life styles remind me of the European and other life styles i seen in other countries we know fulsom is a later culture the kill sites were mostly consist of bison the mammoth was extinct during this time the bison were much bigger during this time so the points shrunk in size not as big as the points that kills mammoths the flutes never really changed much
Eh...
We’ll said
Folsom; points have an