Stone Age People Made Millions of These. Why?

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  • Опубліковано 26 сер 2024

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  • @NoGoodLyingSnake
    @NoGoodLyingSnake 21 день тому +239

    The one with all the holes was definitely a deviled egg tray used at cave parties prior to the existence of Tupperware.

    • @robertsklenka5823
      @robertsklenka5823 21 день тому +7

      Must be a long lost brother-in-law ..he always brought deviled eggs

    • @TheAlans44
      @TheAlans44 20 днів тому +10

      Whoa dude thanks that's the funniest thing I read in a very long time, Just cracked me up for like a minute of chuckling.

    • @lubumbashi6666
      @lubumbashi6666 20 днів тому +6

      It's not the worst theory...

    • @nicholasparreco914
      @nicholasparreco914 17 днів тому +2

      My first thought.

    • @daveB-kg1sh
      @daveB-kg1sh 17 днів тому +2

      good one, sounds good to me

  • @personalperson1743
    @personalperson1743 Місяць тому +117

    Those half rounded holes were for making Marbles. Native Americans played many types of games and they played Marbles of different sizes. They weren't nutting stones, or for starting fires. The reason it was always made in sand stone was to grind the stone down to make it round. Cherokee people have been making marbles for many years and still make them that way today. There is a site on UA-cam called Cherokee Traditions:.. Making Marbles and there you will see exactly what the stones with half spheres are.

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  Місяць тому +8

      Yeah, I watched that video as well. Don’t think it’s the same

    • @karlbarros2849
      @karlbarros2849 Місяць тому +6

      In the southwest there are similar holes called cupuals used in "coming of age" ceremonies. The holes are smaller than your examples but the same random pattern. Could be something ceremonial that our or your speculation could not likely understand the symbolism. Happy hunting, consider bringing less stuff home. Much of archeological evidence comes from it's context in situ.

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  Місяць тому +7

      @@karlbarros2849 All this is already eroded from the bank.

    • @ryandanley7931
      @ryandanley7931 Місяць тому +7

      I was thinking along the same lines. For shaping game balls.

    • @KeepingWatch95
      @KeepingWatch95 27 днів тому +7

      Just looked at a video as you suggested (Cherokee Traditions Making Marbles) Looks like the Indians know what these holes were used for which were passsed down through their traditions.

  • @tomjeffersonwasright2288
    @tomjeffersonwasright2288 27 днів тому +51

    Mortars for grinding grain or acorns. There was also a pestle. The depressions are round because they rotated the pestle. They are all over, because they used them wherever they were. gathering nuts. You have to grind acorns to flour in order to leach out the tannic acid.

    • @booniebuster4193
      @booniebuster4193 21 день тому +11

      This is the correct answer!

    • @-the1b4u-
      @-the1b4u- 21 день тому +3

      Yes and they used a method for removing the crushed shell while mixing with water

    • @user-md9yv7jx2c
      @user-md9yv7jx2c 18 днів тому +2

      The Piute of Nevada ground mesquite beans with these things. Some are up to a liter in size, mostly in sandstone. In the summer, they collect pine nuts in the mountains.

    • @snowmiaow
      @snowmiaow 16 днів тому +1

      Please get one or buy something similar and demonstrate.

    • @snowmiaow
      @snowmiaow 16 днів тому +1

      Please explain your method of leaching tannin from acorn flour because every method I read so far calls for soaking the whole acorn in a stream or something.

  • @grim7747
    @grim7747 Місяць тому +127

    maybe they were used for grinding hematite and mixing paint. The holes acted as little paint cups.

  • @kennethhanshansenjr.7019
    @kennethhanshansenjr.7019 Місяць тому +43

    Ancient people painted their faces, bodies, rock surfaces, cave walls, etc with different pigments. The multitude of holes held different colors. Today we get tatoo's and deface flat surfaces with different colors of grafiti.

    • @scottmoldenhauer8908
      @scottmoldenhauer8908 16 днів тому

      speculation....always good

    • @user-js1nq3sb5w
      @user-js1nq3sb5w 15 днів тому +3

      There would be some paint left in some of them I would think.

    • @Para_Ninja
      @Para_Ninja День тому

      This could be a good explanation for why that one rock had multiple functional holes.. ie different colors. The nut theory or marbles dont explain that one.

  • @breechaudoin8465
    @breechaudoin8465 Місяць тому +25

    I’m sure they served many purposes, but I always wondered if they were used as animal fat lamps. The smaller ones could’ve been portable; the larger ones with more holes might’ve been a pathway marker or used somewhere they needed more light.
    It drives me mad wondering. I’m sure all the elders are looking down on us and just laughing at our ignorance. 🤣

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  Місяць тому +6

      Yeah, I bet it’s something so simple

    • @aaronbentley1879
      @aaronbentley1879 Місяць тому +4

      You should do an experi.ent with that animal fat lamp idea....light would be something invaluable at the time and a lamp makes things so much easier

    • @jackd.ripper7613
      @jackd.ripper7613 7 днів тому +2

      They would have found animal fat residue in at least some of these. They have not.

  • @TheSIeepyhouse
    @TheSIeepyhouse Місяць тому +21

    I have about 50 of these stones myself. The use of them is multipurpose. Around here (Ohio) there were hickory and white oak trees everyplace. So I have no doubt some were used for cracking nuts. If they were used as Flint napping tools or anvils, I would have found micro flint blades or debitage in the area, but its never present. The smaller ones, about the size of your hand or fist were used as a bow drill cap. Making it easier to stabilize the spindle when using a bow drill. The pitted stones here have two different size holes in them like the ones you have. There are black walnut trees here also, and I noticed about 20 yrs ago that some pitted stones have pits large like walnuts and other have small pits like acorns. I.M.O...Most were used in the processing of nuts and grains. (05:49) This stone I'm pretty sure is a stone billet. Most likely it was wrapped in sinew or treated hide to protect it from chipping or breaks, this is the reason for the impact marks on the end that you point out. You only have part of what it used to be. I have a couple, but mine are made of sugar quartz. I have a video on my channel about a stone billet that has writing on it if you're interested. Also I wanted to add that most of the pitted stones that are found here are made of very hard stone like pink granite. I also have a short video of me finding one near a pond that is dried up now but I still find artifacts around it. I.M.O.... Anvil stone just means a rock to pound things on or against. If you use one for working flint, you would use it to stop the billets strike to insure more precision. I have a couple with firing that has turned them red. My explanation for this that some were used to heat fat in a cup for the production of arrows and spears. Using the fat on the arrow bindings to water proof the wood before heat treating the shafts with fire (Grease Cups). Those are my thoughts on this topic. I been hunting artifacts for 50 yrs, and I used to wonder the same thing about the pitted stones. Just dont overthink it. The answer is most often the most obvious.

    • @velvetbees
      @velvetbees 21 день тому +3

      I think the little ones with the oblong stones were small because they were portable. You could take them on a trip.

    • @Seawolfaka
      @Seawolfaka 16 днів тому

      As well as anchor stones for a tripod boiling pot.

    • @snowmiaow
      @snowmiaow 16 днів тому +1

      I like the fat melting idea

    • @user-js1nq3sb5w
      @user-js1nq3sb5w 15 днів тому

      Thank you!

    • @Para_Ninja
      @Para_Ninja День тому

      For me the key to this is the stone with multiple holes on the same surface. The one in this guys video they all seem about the same size. This makes me lean more towards body paint grinding as you might want multiple colors not mixed up at the same time. Seems strange to start a new perfectly good nut cracking hole unless perhaps it got too deep? This doesn't explain the rocks with a hole on each opposing side though. I also have to say id probably just crack nuts on any flat surface as it gets rid of much of the shell easier than having it all enclosed in a half ball. Its a great mystery, thanks for your comment.

  • @jimajello1028
    @jimajello1028 Місяць тому +67

    I am a reconstructive lithic Technologist. When researching pecked & ground tools I found that grinding Garnet, jasper and sand with a lot of quartzes in it to a powder served a important purpose. Holes used with a pestle to grind these salacious stones into dust can be applied to polish the bit ends of a chopping tool making it much harder. The molecular structure is pulled forward forming a welded bond at the bit. The process continues by impregnating dampened leather with the dust and continued rubbing. The bit end is now harder & will cut more effectively. Charcoal could be applied to bit ends performing like a lubricant. Certain research suggests that Egyptians polished their statues using a fine hard dust.

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  Місяць тому +8

      I’ve not heard this theory before

    • @lelandshanks3590
      @lelandshanks3590 Місяць тому +3

      @jimajello1028 do you work with archeologist, or museums?

    • @preppintrucker
      @preppintrucker Місяць тому +4

      @@jimajello1028 me too. They called me a flintknapper. 15 year professional. Bipolar reduction. I enjoyed using that technique. Great for quartz pebbles.

    • @phillockwood8414
      @phillockwood8414 Місяць тому +1

      @@jimajello1028 very interesting, I think that makes sense. I have wondered about the polishing of stones and this seems plausible.

    • @jimajello1028
      @jimajello1028 Місяць тому +6

      @@lelandshanks3590 Leland, I teach and demonstrate stone tool making using organic materials. I have worked with archeologist researching Native American lifeways with the use of lithic & other organic materials. Currently replication and research on a dug out and burned canoe followed with publications on the project. Tks for asking.

  • @cowtownokla
    @cowtownokla Місяць тому +22

    I read a scientific report regarding six nutting stones from East Texas that were examined for trace plant materials. In a "nut-shell" the report found that there were various microscopic plant remnants in the stone, however none were found of known edible varieties.

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  Місяць тому +4

      I’ve not read this before.

    • @redrockplumber5124
      @redrockplumber5124 29 днів тому +1

      I tend to agree they're used to process the acorns. cracking open, then crushing them into a powder before cooking the tannins out.

    • @OnTheRiver66
      @OnTheRiver66 12 днів тому +1

      I would love to know what kind of non edible plant fibers were found in the holes.

  • @lelandshanks3590
    @lelandshanks3590 Місяць тому +29

    My papa said they found 8 of them around the base of one black walnut tree, but hey Scott I agree they had multiple uses.

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  Місяць тому +10

      I think so too, too many different styles to be one thing

    • @mannurse7421
      @mannurse7421 Місяць тому +4

      They probably grind out the hole to keep the walnut still

    • @Pixieshade
      @Pixieshade Місяць тому

      @@mannurse7421 would save smashing little fingers. I imagine the young ones helped crack nuts. Everyone helped in someway, even children.

    • @diggingnashvegas
      @diggingnashvegas Місяць тому +4

      I've found a few, could never figure it out, except that they were at village sites

  • @johngaltman
    @johngaltman 14 днів тому +2

    I live in Southern Arizona and have found dozens of these several of these in granite boulders that are within walking distance of my house. An archaeologist that I know looked at some pictures that I had taken, and he agreed that they were made by the primitive people, but he couldn't tell me what he thinks they were used for.
    The ones we have here are much bigger around and deeper, so being in the desert I thought they may be for collecting rain water, because during the monsoons here they fill up to the top. But that idea wouldn't work with your little stones and how small the holes are.

  • @86z50r
    @86z50r 22 дні тому +20

    They were used to make mini corn muffins for Thanksgiving celebrations!🦃

  • @legacyXplore
    @legacyXplore Місяць тому +22

    The shear number of them makes a person think it’s likely part of something they needed all the time. Meaning it wasn’t a once a year or month type activity but likely daily or weekly. It’s like one of those was an essential thing to have for a camp or group. Fascinating really!

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  Місяць тому +5

      Yes, I feel the same. Had to be a pretty common task to be so many

    • @networkedperson
      @networkedperson 16 днів тому

      @@cleggsadventures please how can I get in touch with you to share info?

  • @conrailfan6277
    @conrailfan6277 Місяць тому +12

    It's where Fred and Barney stored their golf balls!!! 🤣🤣🤣

  • @RustyRaceHorse
    @RustyRaceHorse 17 днів тому +3

    Antler dressing sounds like a good idea.

  • @Im_nobody_special
    @Im_nobody_special Місяць тому +6

    I grind holes in rocks like that just to relieve stress. 😅 ancient therapy 😂

  • @mikeyned690
    @mikeyned690 Місяць тому +8

    Spot stretching leather or hides. Only practical thing I can think of.

  • @grantplowdrey9134
    @grantplowdrey9134 Місяць тому +14

    Tobacco grinding? Herbal medicine grinding? Game board of some sort? I always thought they were used with a pestle to grind up something for eating.

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  Місяць тому +3

      Possible

    • @droidv1
      @droidv1 Місяць тому

      ​@@cleggsadventuressounds much more possible than those other theorys lol

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  Місяць тому +1

      @@droidv1 there’s been some wild ones

    • @jimmylowe1233
      @jimmylowe1233 Місяць тому

      Yes,corn grinder and acorn grinding.

    • @elvinlaton212
      @elvinlaton212 16 днів тому

      They are remnants of campfire pastimes.

  • @rebeccaloves6882
    @rebeccaloves6882 5 днів тому

    The coyotes thought one of your explanations was hilarious! Thanks for the interesting video

  • @Axis_Of_Evil
    @Axis_Of_Evil Місяць тому +9

    If they were for breaking nuts, I would imagine they would miss from time to time and rough up the edges , leaving obvious marks. Even being hit with a piece wood would leave an impression of use.
    Very puzzling indeed.
    Maybe a women's make-up kit..lol

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  Місяць тому +3

      For sure, I don’t buy the nut theory.
      The pigment holder has been said by a few, so maybe something to that. I do find a lot of rubbed and ground hematite

  • @TerrySlaven-zd3um
    @TerrySlaven-zd3um 17 днів тому +4

    Or....could be various versions of prehistoric toe straighteners.

  • @ralphwatten2426
    @ralphwatten2426 Місяць тому +6

    They were new to making beer glasses so the bottoms were rounded. They needed some way to hold their beers. These were smaller so they were used for Pilsners.

  • @TimFaulkner-qb5kl
    @TimFaulkner-qb5kl Місяць тому +7

    Another great and informative video. Best channel on UA-cam

  • @RyanRohl
    @RyanRohl Місяць тому +30

    My grandma called them egg stones, said they were used for cooking eggs by the fire.

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  Місяць тому +7

      I’ve not heard this one before

    • @athelwulfgalland
      @athelwulfgalland Місяць тому +5

      @@cleggsadventures It's an interesting thought though - but there's none of the usual discoloration on the stone you usually see on firestones. Plus sandstone has a bad tendency of cracking/exploding when exposed to too much heat. Still it doesn't mean that warming it up by keeping it near the fire would do either?
      BTW, I returned from where my sister resides. I wasn't able to do any real searching for artifacts as their entire region is dealing with some abnormal flooding. I was able to see, in some of the seasonal waterways, the type of soil I could expect to find. Lots of sand over top of mud. The local stone seems to be almost wholly sandstone save for glacial deposited cobbles. My sister did show me some flakes of flint or chert which they'd found in times passed so that's a good sign.
      Next time, maybe. She wants my family to relocate to the region & after visiting I can put up few arguments against it!

    • @ianking-jv4hg
      @ianking-jv4hg Місяць тому +2

      @@RyanRohl i've seen some of your grandmothas "egg rocks" so big it would take a crane to lift them, or a pipe driller to go under them to "place" the fire underneath them.

    • @Jbird3d
      @Jbird3d Місяць тому

      I was thinking the same thing

    • @RooDAwAkInG
      @RooDAwAkInG 29 днів тому +2

      @RyanRohl had a similar idea great thinking or Gma' knows best

  • @FredFindersTreasures
    @FredFindersTreasures Місяць тому +4

    You guys forget that they smoked a lot of wacky tobacco back then. Stoned a lot of days they would use these stones to make and crush down fine tobacco for the peace or war pipe. Pioneers long ago after seeing and finding many of these stones coined the term "being stoned". This is were that term came from.
    Also they look very similar to modern day plastic paint holders that i have today. So, in theory they had multiple uses for them.

  • @novabigstar1509
    @novabigstar1509 Місяць тому +7

    I think the smaller hardstone ones are sockets for bow and drill fire starting or just drill use. I have a hand sized one that is very worn and polished in the hole and also on the side of it where I assume the wooden spindle and bow string were rubbing against it. They also apparently used slightly larger ones too by leaning over and applying pressure with the chest to keep the spindle drill shaft firmly in place while using them.

  • @reggiemcdaniel1802
    @reggiemcdaniel1802 3 дні тому

    Cutting animal hides- making holes in leather- breaking bones- food preparations. Maybe face paint in some parts of the world.

  • @TiggerTitu-wo1bj
    @TiggerTitu-wo1bj 26 днів тому +2

    Monos and matates for grinding corn and other foods.
    Grind food to make the famous and much used staple "Pemmican"
    Vettepilot

  • @WALLYnWV-ur7bd
    @WALLYnWV-ur7bd Місяць тому +19

    This is what I was told as a kid. They were used to make marbles or beads. They would find a small stream or run and dam it up with rocks and mud. Then they would get a shaft of wood or cane that they could hollow out and make a pipe of sorts. Then they would situate the pipe into and through the dam so water would run through it. They would then place the nutting stone a foot or two under the trickle of water so that the water went right into the hole in the stone. They would get a small stone that was already roundish and place it into the hole where the water was trickling and the water would tumble the small rock and over time make it round like a marble or bead.

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  Місяць тому +6

      Seems complicated.

    • @PorchHonkey
      @PorchHonkey Місяць тому

      You can set them in your sink and then place a marble or roundish rock slightly smaller than the dimple in your "Nutting stone" then turn your spigot on and center the Nutting stone under the stream of water. It would eventually make a pretty close to perfectly round stone/marble. But how long would it take? That's a good question. ​@@cleggsadventures

    • @higgs923
      @higgs923 Місяць тому +3

      @@cleggsadventures My modest understanding of archaeology suggests that hunter-gatherer societies had far more free time than their successors. Folks who had the skill to make useful tools from flint or Obsidian - not to mention the skill to drill holes in stone and shell beads - would be able to do this.

    • @flipflopski2951
      @flipflopski2951 18 днів тому +2

      They would be polished inside if that were the case and they're not.

    • @mattmatt6572
      @mattmatt6572 16 днів тому +1

      Yeah deffinatly the inside the hole would show evidence great thought though it made me think. Maybe they even did this some times

  • @GadreelAdvocat
    @GadreelAdvocat Місяць тому +4

    The OG multitool. They were probably used for multiple applications.

  • @tnmantn8938
    @tnmantn8938 5 днів тому

    Yep…I think they were used for grinding sharp edges of flaked tools during the production process to facilitate flaking control…

  • @Mark-vx5xm
    @Mark-vx5xm Місяць тому +2

    It seems since all the holes are relatively shallow, it provided easy access to whatever was in them, which would explain why there were so many created, so as not to drill/chip any further into the rock.

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  Місяць тому +3

      @@Mark-vx5xm I was thinking along those lines. Seems when a hole got so deep, they had to start another one.

  • @justyntheoutdoorsman6995
    @justyntheoutdoorsman6995 Місяць тому +12

    Maybe the stones with multiple where for paints they made so they could separate them and not mix the colors up

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  Місяць тому +4

      @@justyntheoutdoorsman6995 Possibly, I heard this theory as well.

    • @andydaniels3029
      @andydaniels3029 Місяць тому +3

      Were that the case, wouldn’t there be pigment residue to find in them, or would water and other forms of environmental erosion have worn that away by now?

    • @nelsonx5326
      @nelsonx5326 Місяць тому +1

      I like that.

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  Місяць тому +1

      @@andydaniels3029 I think these are mostly Archaic period, not sure if it would still be in there. I guess it depends on what conditions it was laying in for all those years

    • @curly__3
      @curly__3 Місяць тому

      This was my initial thought 👍🏻.

  • @fernie5128
    @fernie5128 Місяць тому +3

    This is really interesting. My ancestors lived near Barrackville, Marion Cty, WV in the late 18th century. I found a YT video showing that property (which excited me no end) which also contained similar stones. Thanks for all of your videos. Cheers from MINN.

  • @jamesf4405
    @jamesf4405 18 днів тому +1

    That's where they stored their eggs! 😂😂😂

  • @NeptunesLagoon
    @NeptunesLagoon 17 днів тому +1

    For grinding grains… 😮

  • @JimHerbertOutdoors
    @JimHerbertOutdoors Місяць тому +5

    Because of your videos, i found myself out in a no till bean field an hour south of Chicago last week. I found a scraper, a half of an arrowhead, a possible firestone, and possibly a rock like this with a hole. Can i email you some pics for id ? Either way Thanks ✌️

  • @DoogiesEarthworks
    @DoogiesEarthworks Місяць тому +22

    I just got done reading a book called Ohio's Archaeology by Bradley Leper that said they were potentially used for some sort of step in the woodworking process for making canoes, and possibly early shelters as well. I think they used these nutting stones to store their embers for safe transport in their controlled burns of creating canoes. That's why ya find them along the waterways so much. I also read in the same book that there’s evidence of Archaic people using controlled burns to eliminate the threat of wildfires, and to propagate fire-resistant trees that bore edible foods. So they were probably transporting tons of embers for tons of different processes all the time. Also.... GREAT VIDEO CLEGG!! Thank you for releasing it, it's always a good day when you upload :)

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  Місяць тому +6

      Very Much Appreciated

    • @axeman33333
      @axeman33333 Місяць тому +12

      With all due respect , I don’t think they would lug around those very heavy stones just to carry embers. Also way too shallow for that as well.

    • @DoogiesEarthworks
      @DoogiesEarthworks Місяць тому +3

      @@axeman33333 I totally agree with ya, I think they would use the larger stones in the canoe making process by propping up a log, and filling those holes with slow burning embers underneath it, doing so they were able to basically smoke out the log and make it easier to hollow out. But who knows , thats the beautiful thing about ancient history, it has a way of tickling everyones imagination! I have enjoyed reading the theories in the comments here.

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  Місяць тому +2

      @@axeman33333 I Agree

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  Місяць тому +2

      @@DoogiesEarthworks I don’t know, wouldn’t be much heat

  • @matthewrinehart2367
    @matthewrinehart2367 15 днів тому +1

    I have one made of hard stone I found on a beach in Alaska. I assumed it was drilled to put a wedge in and split the stone. I still have it. The hollowed out peice is the circumference of a dime.

  • @ReturnoftheCollector
    @ReturnoftheCollector Місяць тому +1

    I love the way this spurred others to comment about what they thought. Good stuff. Still waiting for your dig with us. lol.

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  Місяць тому +1

      Yeah, these things get people talking. Everyone has a theory

  • @stevenseguro
    @stevenseguro Місяць тому +3

    In coastal California we rarely ever find arrowheads, perhaps because ancient man had so much easy access to seal and other animal bones, but I have seen these artifacts many times often clustered into VERTICAL stone and rock surfaces, almost as if they are the result or aid of some type of target practice .

  • @jimmyz2098
    @jimmyz2098 Місяць тому +3

    Great channel! Man I love the content on this channel. Scott - I have zero idea. LOL But if I was throwing random guesses out there.... What about tent pole bases. For lean-toos / teepee type structures or what not? Even the multiple holes... could move your pole around until you got it right. ?? Or how about the sides of a cooking pit... using them for spits to fit into to? I guess if that were the case... then perhaps there would be grooves heading down to the poles - at least on left or right hand side of a spit. ?? Or even the base of a fire-starting mechanism. LOL Probably dumb ideas. I agree - could be multiple uses.

  • @jimc6687
    @jimc6687 3 дні тому

    We absolutely need some more of Clegg's Adventures great fun videos on Native American Indian artifact hunting ideas and direction!!

  • @stevenbrenner2862
    @stevenbrenner2862 20 днів тому +1

    They could be used to grind down sharp edges on flint being napped into a tool such as a point, knife or whatever kind of tool is being knapped. In knapping, a billet is used to knock off a flake or fragment, leaving a sharp or razor edge. This then has to be ground down to form a proper anvil for the next strike with a billet or pressure flaking to remove the next flake. If the razor edge isn’t ground down to remove the razor edge, then removing the next flake is uncontrolled or random, leading to splitting, fragmenting, or a short flake breaking off and leaving a hump, essentially ruining the process, the whole thing being wasted and thrown away.
    I have recovered a grooved piece of sandstone that was used to grind down sharp edges left from flaking, although it is quite small, being hand held and is about three inches long and two inches wide, and has such deep grooves it was likely worn out and thrown away or abandoned.
    The various sized holes could be used to grind down the sharp edges on various sized flint tools during manufacture.
    The sharp, razor edges are ground down by most contemporary flint knappers during the knapping process, using the billet to knock off a flake, grinding down the sharp edge to form a striking platform, then striking with the billet to knock off the next flake.
    The flint could be either ground down with a piece of sandstones used like sand paper, or the flint could be rubbed on a piece of sandstone to grind down the sharp edge to form a striking platform for the next billet strike.
    That’s just an idea. The holes in the sandstone might have been used for a number of things, but if there’s pecking, then likely stone would of been involved in making them.

  • @shaneapplegate1975
    @shaneapplegate1975 Місяць тому +2

    More good stuff. I don't know about that new hat. That tour de France hat sure was snazzy 👍🔨

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  Місяць тому +2

      Much Appreciated! It’ll be back, The Tour is getting good. Mountains are starting to

  • @oklahomanativeexploration7546
    @oklahomanativeexploration7546 Місяць тому +3

    The holes are for making Cherokee marbles. The shell idea was a good one, but I’ve tried it out making primitive pottery with wild Clay. I found out that if you roast the shells on the coals, they just crumble in your hands and you don’t have to crush them up. also, I found out that after you fire the pottery if the shells have just been crushed and not roasted, the pottery, just kind of falls apart the next day, because the shells go ahead and get fibrous and come apart inside the clay.

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  Місяць тому +2

      I’ve seen this practice as well. Why so many holes all the same.

    • @oklahomanativeexploration7546
      @oklahomanativeexploration7546 Місяць тому

      @@cleggsadventures I don’t know. That’s a good question. I might try to make a Cherokee marble and see if it works. Maybe that would answer why they use so many holes.if that’s what they were for?

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  Місяць тому

      @@oklahomanativeexploration7546 For sure. Experiments may reveal some answers

    • @oklahomanativeexploration7546
      @oklahomanativeexploration7546 Місяць тому

      @@cleggsadventures As far as I know, we don’t have those kind of rocks with those kind of holes in Oklahoma. We have nutting stones. but they’re usually associated with a rock outcrop by a stream. Or a grinding stone that has just slight indentions in it just enough to keep the nut from rolling off and the ones I’ve seen are red rock, which is sandstone because that’s what we have here.

    • @Creekstain
      @Creekstain Місяць тому

      ua-cam.com/video/n9l2Z4o9yTg/v-deo.htmlsi=SFB_6DjQ34HlSELG cherokee marble making

  • @unclescipio3136
    @unclescipio3136 12 днів тому

    Two documented uses of these stone 'grids' in Southern Africa are 1. beadcrafting. Beads of different colours/shapes are placed in these containers while the piece is being worked on, so it acts as a kind of sorting device. Modern beadcrafters use trays with very similar depressions. They're generally found near 'home caves' or settlements. 2. Used for grinding and mixing pigments for rock painting.

  • @ratatoskr1069
    @ratatoskr1069 8 днів тому

    "Nutting Stones" That does not mean the hole were "made" for cracking nuts. Actually nuts, especially acorns, were placed on rocks and then ground with another rock in a mortar and pestle style method. This grinding *produces* a perfectly round hole over time. The nutmeal or acornmeal then has to be processed further for making edible food from it!

  • @richardperkins6132
    @richardperkins6132 Місяць тому +2

    I believe that they were used for several different things during their lives. For nuts, herbs, shells possibily, an just about anything they needed to grind up for their uses. Great video my friend. 😁👍👍

  • @backyardsounds
    @backyardsounds Місяць тому +5

    I'm convinced it's for paints. You know, like reds and what not.

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  Місяць тому +2

      Several have said the same

    • @Pixieshade
      @Pixieshade Місяць тому +1

      They have proven the white marble Greek statues were once colorfully painted because they have special light that can detect painted pigments left behind on the marble. Sandstone would def hold pigments, that would be easily proven if it were for paints by scientific analysis.

    • @KRscience
      @KRscience Місяць тому

      But why are most pitted stones pitted on both sides? You only need one side if it's for paint.

    • @jamesluebben5925
      @jamesluebben5925 Місяць тому

      different colors?

  • @cheryllunsford8856
    @cheryllunsford8856 2 години тому

    Art! Many Stone Age Animal Effigies seem to have well placed eyes. Look at your stones from a distance and look for the entire rock to be a “bird” etc. several of your “nut stones” have animal characteristics, multi holes for shell, etc. can be a turtle, or? They used all sides of a stone, outer edges, sometimes even a face.
    Virginia

  • @brucedawson6991
    @brucedawson6991 Місяць тому +2

    For those with multiple holes, it was likely the removed material itself that was needed for another purpose. It might have been a practical way to get uniform, pure material for pottery temper, paint pigment, or grinding sand. Once a hole reached a certain size removal became too difficult so they would start a new hole. For small stones they would just turn the stone over, thus a hole on both sides. They would peck the stone and then grind the fragments in the hole, thus the evidence of pecking marks. The hole would keep the removed material together. Stones with a single hole might not fall into this use classification.

  • @joeessig6955
    @joeessig6955 Місяць тому +24

    Modern ppl forget about the decimation of the American chestnut in the 1930’s. Chestnuts fed ancient ppl and mega fauna for thousands of years. This nutting stones were used mostly for chestnut but other nuts as well

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  Місяць тому +4

      @@joeessig6955 Possibly, but chestnuts are pretty soft shelled. We may never know

    • @ETAisNOW
      @ETAisNOW Місяць тому +6

      It’s so crazy that our woods used to look so much cooler, giant beautiful trees, they even made homes in the stumps, I heard they used that wood for your cradle and your coffin and everything in between. And then poof they’re gone, now it’s all small trees, completely different landscape and culture, just one person ago our forests used to be a paradise. Now I have to go to the redwoods to experience that

    • @joeessig6955
      @joeessig6955 Місяць тому +8

      @@ETAisNOWyep. Greatest ecological disaster in modern history that never gets talked about.

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  Місяць тому +6

      @@ETAisNOW I could imagine all the old growth trees there were. I doubt many were cut, having to use a stone axe

    • @ETAisNOW
      @ETAisNOW Місяць тому +4

      @@cleggsadventures Sometimes I like to think when I pick up an artifact, especially one made from some type of material not native to my area, that someone I never saw, made something important from some material I’ve never found that came from somewhere I’ve never seen, and easily might’ve carried it up a giant tree I’ll never see, and this entirely different world used to exist that I’ll never see, but there’s an artifact laying before me.

  • @indianasmith8152
    @indianasmith8152 Місяць тому +4

    We find these all over East Texas, too. No one knows their exact use, but I always enjoy finding them.

  • @michaelwhorley7731
    @michaelwhorley7731 17 днів тому +1

    These rocks were the starting process for making a mortar, they made the small holes first before heavy pecking began to eliminate rock fracture. Love your videos brother.

    • @ChuckoMountain-fv9yj
      @ChuckoMountain-fv9yj 16 днів тому

      Ancient Indians are reading this and laughing their arses off woo woo woo!

    • @michaelwhorley7731
      @michaelwhorley7731 16 днів тому

      @@ChuckoMountain-fv9yj
      I was just giving my opinion, I didn't know you had a PhD in douchebagary

  • @anastaciochapa5198
    @anastaciochapa5198 5 днів тому

    With the right kind of covering, with a lot of surface area, they could have been used as water caches to collect dew.

  • @Spearhead-lz1oq
    @Spearhead-lz1oq Місяць тому +2

    For crushing, but smaller for women hands and strength. My 2 cents.

  • @lelonbond6682
    @lelonbond6682 Місяць тому +2

    a friend now passrd would chemacly extract what was in stones and pottery and could tell what they were used for..

  • @thealgonquin5822
    @thealgonquin5822 10 днів тому

    Had no idea you had that on your property. Watching fully.

  • @cowboy399
    @cowboy399 3 дні тому

    I think they were making medicine and stones with multiple holes were for making complicated ingredients from multiple plants and or seeds. Another possibility is they were making seasonings for food using multiple plants.

  • @fredbunce9232
    @fredbunce9232 Місяць тому +4

    A farmer in Doddridge
    County (where the Giants roamed.) Told me they were for making cupcakes.😂

  • @curly__3
    @curly__3 Місяць тому +4

    War paints, etc...like a watercolor mixing tray. The nut theory is good though, if made to the proper depth for the type of nut, it would prevent the inner nut from being smashed which would go bad faster and be harder to store and eat. The multiple holes were probaby different sizes for different size nuts? Who knows?

  • @rogergriffin9893
    @rogergriffin9893 10 днів тому

    The large deep holes were mostly used for grinding grains, mesquite beans, etc. The shallow ones I'm not as sure of, but the pestels were found near the grain grinding mortars.
    The little shallow depressions might have been used for grinding something. I've seen enough of the deeper holes with the grinding stones here in the Southwest Desert at the cliff dwelling sites.

  • @ernestdalton5085
    @ernestdalton5085 13 днів тому

    Used for crushing food. Stones, and plants for paint and other useful products that are used.

  • @lelonbond6682
    @lelonbond6682 Місяць тому +4

    i have most of mine where the people had no pottery.

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  Місяць тому +6

      Very good clue there! Maybe not for crushing shell then.

  • @coloradomountainman8659
    @coloradomountainman8659 Місяць тому +2

    These were actually used as bowling balls, hence the finger and thumb indentations. It wasn't until eons later that one bright enterprising fellow thought to make them into a round ball shape.

  • @Txsidewinder1
    @Txsidewinder1 19 днів тому +1

    I say they are toenail trimmers. Stick your toe in and grind the toe in half circle motions...

  • @lucuindawozniak2434
    @lucuindawozniak2434 14 днів тому

    It might be used to grind shells into beads, or to grind shell into fish hooks. Depending on the size of the bead or hook, they could go from big to little, or possibly be used to bore holes into beads or fishnet weights.

  • @cleanreed
    @cleanreed 17 днів тому

    They were used for grinding Mary Jane seeds so they could be smoked and wouldn't fall out and burn their shirt.
    Most Cave Men could only afford one shirt and they didn't want a bunch of burn holes in it from the seeds.
    I heard stories about this in college, but have no personal experience with it.
    There was another similar story I heard back in the 1970's, something about Mary Jane brownies, but I can't remember the details.
    Great story Gregg!

  • @brucejacobs4026
    @brucejacobs4026 15 днів тому

    I could see these being used to grind/crush medicine from herbs and seeds. You would want multiple pockets to avoid cross contamination.

  • @SmokemCody
    @SmokemCody Місяць тому +1

    Good video!

  • @SouPacGuy
    @SouPacGuy День тому

    Those are the results of making pestles and used as mortars as well. We see these all over the South Pacific and we also have may pestles with lovely, flared heads and tapered handles. Where I live, the Marquesas we have an untold number of examples which look very much like yours.

  • @raywhitehead730
    @raywhitehead730 14 днів тому

    I the Boy Scouts a few of us actually made bread from Acorns. Grind up the nuts to a mash, put it in a cheese cloth, leach out the tannin. Bake it. Put honey or berries over the flat bread.

  • @pirangeloferretti3588
    @pirangeloferretti3588 14 днів тому

    In northern Italy in some prehistoric sites there are a lot of these semi-holes in the rock, the guide called them 'coppelle' which in means something like 'small cups'. The explanatioin offered was that they had some ritualistic purpose, but it's just an hypothesis; they were clearly man-made being surrounded by many other incisions clearly representing animals and rudimental human figures.

  • @muskerp
    @muskerp 14 днів тому

    gritty sandstone is easy to drill into but if it was used for grinding food it might well end up with gritty food.

  • @Demon-Hunter_1
    @Demon-Hunter_1 6 днів тому +1

    Grinding dried corn into flour?

  • @johnbruce2868
    @johnbruce2868 8 днів тому

    Oddly enough, I've just seen something exactly like the multiple hole version in Scotland, in the Aberlemno Stones visitors car park (I'll email a photograph to you). As a retired archaeologist it puzzled me. In the UK we have both Neolithic Cup and Ring marks and, sometimes simply cup marks. They are especially associated with the Neolithic Age (4,100 - 2,500 B.C.). Do a search, "cup marked stones" on the internet. It might give you some ideas. Similar artefacts are found across the world but it's particularly amazing to learn they are found in the U.S. as well. Thank you.

  • @meathead2676
    @meathead2676 11 днів тому +1

    Natural 💧 made by nature.

  • @janetdevon
    @janetdevon 14 днів тому

    Ancient people used different substances as decoration during rituals. I guess you would call it warpaint. Ochres and chalks would need need to be ground and mix with a fat or fluid to make paints, for decorating themselves, and for paintings.

  • @knightowl3577
    @knightowl3577 16 днів тому

    There are ancient stones found in Ireland and Scotland which have small holes like this. These stones are highly decorated with carved spirals and swirls, but it is not clear if all the carving was done at the same time.

  • @RustyRaceHorse
    @RustyRaceHorse 17 днів тому +1

    Makes you wonder why they made several holes at the same depth… like the depth was the issues so they started another hole… then it becomes too deep… hmm.

  • @NateWilliams190
    @NateWilliams190 15 днів тому +1

    Perhaps they favored depressions of a certain depth, and whenever one wore too deep, they just started a new one.

  • @jcknives4162
    @jcknives4162 Місяць тому +1

    I do think that the pecking surfaces were for small seeds. When you have larger seeds like wheat you can afford to use a grinding plate. But small seeds would be difficult to keep local and process.
    As for hematite, they also ground manganese. They may not have necessarily made paint in these.
    So, for me, minerals, small seeds… but everything would be difficult to manage in a larger mortar.

  • @snowmiaow
    @snowmiaow 16 днів тому

    Thank you for discussing your study of this. I believe archeologists often say some weird stuff.

  • @slehar
    @slehar 14 днів тому

    Used for ceremonial prep of some hallucinogen? Peyote? Toad skin? Multiple holes for group ceremonies? Flip side hole for after “passing thhrough to the other side?

  • @mcchuggernaut9378
    @mcchuggernaut9378 Місяць тому +1

    I have a few ideas but I think someone has beat me to the first one: Pigment grinding. It would explain the multiple holes - they didn't want to get the different colors mixed up from the stones they crushed and then ground fine. It also would explain the rough sandstone, since that is a great material for grinding things into a powder with versus a smoother textured rock. Also small holes are better than large for this action because a little pigment went a long way so they only needed something to hold a bit of it like a painter's pallet. I cannot explain why there are often holes on other sides of the rocks adequately, though. Only other ideas I had were they might have been used in combination with a branch or antler for spinning bow strings or cloth, or for using a bow drill. Even though sandstone is really rough, it is also much easier to "peck" a hole into with a harder rock than most other stones (Which might explain the fact they seem to have been pecked out initially rather than ground in), and they could have used bark or leaves or mud or fat or who knows what in the holes as a lubricant so the sandstone didn't wear out the tools they may have used in these holes for sockets as quickly or harshly. The funniest thing is, if we could go back in time and see first hand why they did this, it would probably be glaringly obvious and just doesn't occur to us now because we live so differently! We'd probably be shaking our heads wondering why we didn't think of it. This is a fascinating topic, Clegg! Thanks for sharing what you know!
    P.S. Then I found this! It's awfully darn convincing that this is the true origin of these stones!:
    ua-cam.com/video/n9l2Z4o9yTg/v-deo.html
    I've even seen an episode where you found quite a few native game balls yourself!

    • @flipflopski2951
      @flipflopski2951 18 днів тому

      Mineral color stays on rock surfaces for a long time. See Lascaux Cave. That certainly was not the use.

  • @stanlindert6332
    @stanlindert6332 Місяць тому +2

    I can see the hole as a way to make pressure flaking easier. First a bit of leather was laying over the hole than folded over the point. Than a bit of flat wood over that held fast by one hand. Antler is able to push flakes under the flint as it is held secure between the leather. Also any other applications that a person could think of. Little ones are just more portable. Leave the big ones in camp. And you know they cracked nuts in there too. A true stone age multi tool, or work bench if you want.

    • @jamesburnett7085
      @jamesburnett7085 17 днів тому

      ThEn spells the word you want, not than. Pathetic.

  • @mattchristopher3220
    @mattchristopher3220 9 днів тому

    They were most likely used for grinding different grains and nuts.

  • @DanneyTanner
    @DanneyTanner 23 дні тому +1

    I have a friend in Africa and the first thing he said well that is a good question. And then he says possibly for Spiritual reasons😊 I think if a hole is deep enough you could put a stick in there and then then place a skull on top of the Stick of the enemy you just killed😮 to scare off other enemies😮

  • @meenki347
    @meenki347 14 днів тому

    Thanks, I'm quite interested in these kind of subjects. I've never heard of this archeological enigma.

  • @user-co7fj4ib1j
    @user-co7fj4ib1j Місяць тому +1

    Rocky is on a hot spot down at the river! Your missing out!

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  Місяць тому +2

      He’s saving his spot for a video. Says he found a a place

  • @theunlearnedmind7374
    @theunlearnedmind7374 18 днів тому

    Looks like something used for some sort of food prep.

  • @kingharry3260
    @kingharry3260 17 днів тому

    I think they are marker stones used to communicate something, like a stone age street sign. It was the only method of making a permanent and hard to alter mark.

  • @samharper4289
    @samharper4289 Місяць тому +1

    I don't know brother? 😂 Alot of good theories here though. 😉

  • @thinhipps
    @thinhipps 6 днів тому

    I have several sandstone hammerstones i found on my land in wash outs,in south alabama. 0:10 never knew what they were until now.only knew that they had been worked by human hands.thnx.nice .

  • @user-il1zr5wj1j
    @user-il1zr5wj1j 5 днів тому

    Here is my wild-assed theory. They were used as a way to mark periods of time. If a number of these nutting stones are placed in a group, a small marker (stone, wood or bone) can be moved, or not, from one pecked hole to another each day, a rudimentary calendar or "day timer" can be formed. Communication to others about when an event happened or will happen is visible and totally clear. Lunar phases, first arrival of frost/geese, day mother-in-law moved in, Lol.

  • @Coffeeclick
    @Coffeeclick 21 день тому

    Native Americans used a variety of medicinal plants and substances that often required grinding using tools like mortars and pestles. Near the Ohio River, tribes such as the Shawnee, Miami, and others used local plants for medicinal purposes. Common practices included grinding herbs, roots, and seeds to create powders or pastes for treating ailments.
    Some examples of plants that might have been ground include:
    - Willow bark: Used for its pain-relieving properties, similar to modern aspirin.
    - Echinacea: Used for boosting the immune system and treating infections.
    - Ginseng: Used as a general tonic and to improve energy.
    These practices were integral to their healthcare and spiritual rituals, and grinding tools like mortars and pestles were essential for preparing these remedies.

  • @jonathancardy9941
    @jonathancardy9941 17 днів тому

    That's the thing about mr Teaches the Children and his stoneworking classes. Everyone got as far as making a hole in the rock, then moved on to more useful classes like buckskin - making moccasins and woodworking - making an arrow. Granny can still point to the hole she made, just like mine.

  • @ianbruce6515
    @ianbruce6515 15 днів тому

    They sure do look like they were used for making the stone spheres for the cherokee marble game.

    • @cleggsadventures
      @cleggsadventures  15 днів тому

      @@ianbruce6515 they’re not smooth. Was caused by a striking motion

  • @hengedy
    @hengedy 2 дні тому

    I just think they grinded seeds, corn, nuts etc. for making flower and stuff.
    These people were traveling after natural resources and big "machinery" were not practical for them. They needed something small for making a bread or two etc. by the campfire.
    They were probably staying at the same camp for some days\weeks or months before they moved on.