How to Find Flintknapping Rock, Unusual Materials, Knapping Tips +Tricks, Quartz, Primitive Survival

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  • Опубліковано 6 лют 2020
  • Flintknapper tips, tricks, & ancient methods for how to identify & find flintknapping rock in areas that are poor in flint or chert stone. Discover unusual flint knapping materials & rarely discussed skills of traditional flint knapping, useful for primitive survival, primitive bushcraft, and traditional stone tool making.
    If you join my Patreon you get many perks, live video streams, extra videos not seen on youtube and you help support my channel. YOU make it possible for me to go on these trips and film this content.
    JOIN MY PATREON! : Welcome friends. / visionquestoutdoors
    Travel / Outdoors Adventure / How-to Vlog:
    Jay explores the coasts and beaches of Connecticut in New England / East Coast USA in search of workable rock and tool stone for flint knapping, while occasionally battling seagulls and hypothyroid symptoms. He demonstrates knapping skills like the bipolar technique, quartz knapping and identification, knapping quartzite, floor tile and...shell??
    What kind of video should we make next? Have a question you’d like to see answered? Comment below!
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    Let us know what you think! Like, Comment, Share, and Subscribe!
    Follow us online at:
    Instagram: / visionquestoutdoors
    Facebook: / visionquestoutdoors
    JOIN MY PATREON! : Welcome friends. / visionquestoutdoors
    Get our handcrafted primitive stone knives and outdoors gear on Etsy at: www.etsy.com/shop/VisionQuest...
    ~-~~-~~~-~~-~
    CHECK OUT OUR NEWEST VIDEO! "Finding CHERT while traveling to Glacial Lake- HOW TO FIND FLINT: Season 2, Ep.1 Primitive Bushcraft"
    • Upstate New York: Lith...
    ~-~~-~~~-~~-~
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 177

  • @Wildernessquestoutdoors
    @Wildernessquestoutdoors  2 роки тому +1

    Www.Patreon.com/visionquestoutdoors

  • @vikkijov
    @vikkijov 4 роки тому +26

    "A rock is just not a ROCK!" Great job on teaching.

    • @Wildernessquestoutdoors
      @Wildernessquestoutdoors  4 роки тому +2

      Vicki Indrizzo-Valente figures you would like this one. Especially the seagulls lol

  • @roncadenhead9650
    @roncadenhead9650 5 місяців тому +4

    I love your videos as I learn so much from them about knapping and finding material. Thank you for sharing.

  • @micahspruth-janssen3138
    @micahspruth-janssen3138 4 роки тому +48

    Glad you’re cautious around bone/shell dust. Just be careful with chert dust too. Wear a respirator if your inside or just Knap in a well ventilated area (outside for example) It’s easy to forget that silica dust is just as dangerous to your health. Silicosis is no joke!

    • @Wildernessquestoutdoors
      @Wildernessquestoutdoors  4 роки тому +11

      Micah Spruth-Janssen yep yep. I never knap indoors

    • @connerkicklighter6000
      @connerkicklighter6000 2 роки тому +4

      Never knew that thanks Micah

    • @nunyabusiness3082
      @nunyabusiness3082 Рік тому +1

      Absolutely ridiculous! Do you wear a respirator when taking kids to a little league game or playing baseball. Because the diamond dirt has radioactive ☢️ particles in it. Don't forget to wear your 😷
      Enjoy your thumbs down 👎

    • @jimmyhaley727
      @jimmyhaley727 8 місяців тому

      use large fan,,period

  • @scinanisern9845
    @scinanisern9845 9 місяців тому +2

    Good stuff. Your efforts are appreciated.

  • @SwedishChef1977
    @SwedishChef1977 День тому +1

    Just new to your channel and loving it! Happy 4th from Sweden!

  • @alexmacy9413
    @alexmacy9413 2 місяці тому +1

    Good video! It's nice to see other examples of knappble stones.

  • @nlew3925
    @nlew3925 4 роки тому +8

    This is honestly so helpful, the way you demonstrate is so much more informative than any other demo ive seen.

  • @davidtidwell5312
    @davidtidwell5312 4 роки тому +13

    Exceptional video photographer, I hope see is highly paid!!!

  • @LeahMcNeir
    @LeahMcNeir 4 роки тому +11

    Happy you’re making videos and teaching again =)
    This one has some really great flintknapping tips sprinkled all throughout along with how to find flintknapping materials in places without chert

  • @micahspruth-janssen3138
    @micahspruth-janssen3138 4 роки тому +5

    This is by far your most professional looking video yet! :-) loved it! Thanks for the teaching and showing

    • @Wildernessquestoutdoors
      @Wildernessquestoutdoors  4 роки тому +2

      Micah Spruth-Janssen been a bit since we’ve been able to actually put a vid together! Glad I can do it again

  • @sj-kp1ks
    @sj-kp1ks 3 роки тому +2

    This is a smart guy. I love watching smart people doing interesting things.

  • @exdy-eb3dv
    @exdy-eb3dv 4 роки тому +6

    Thank you so much man, this video is the best on the web for me, i'm really glad that i can finally watch this video and start working on my flintknapping skills, i love your videos, but for me thi is absolutely the best! Thank you so much! Great work, you are very skilled!!!

  • @roblagerburg7233
    @roblagerburg7233 Рік тому +1

    Very practical, thanks!

  • @carr869
    @carr869 Рік тому +2

    You’ve given a really good starting place. Thank you

  • @davidtidwell5312
    @davidtidwell5312 4 роки тому +4

    Great videos, keep them coming!!

    • @Wildernessquestoutdoors
      @Wildernessquestoutdoors  4 роки тому +3

      David Tidwell keep commenting! It really helps my channel being found. That way I can keep making these!

    • @davidtidwell5312
      @davidtidwell5312 4 роки тому +1

      After watching this video, I was motivated to go outside in my own yard,and re-evaluate my rock. I did find some orange-red rock very smooth that might be quartz-ish. Thanks for the advice!!

    • @Wildernessquestoutdoors
      @Wildernessquestoutdoors  4 роки тому

      David Tidwell awesome dude!

  • @Kyle-cl3wp
    @Kyle-cl3wp 2 роки тому +1

    Thankyou for the knowledge, chill video to watch.🙂

  • @jrvenable1
    @jrvenable1 4 роки тому +2

    Just found your channel - appreciate all the great info - thanks!

    • @Wildernessquestoutdoors
      @Wildernessquestoutdoors  4 роки тому +1

      No problem! Make sure you hit the bell icon so it notifies you when I upload.

  • @DIUBrandon
    @DIUBrandon Рік тому +2

    This helped alot. I'm in niagara peninsula. We have some onondaga

  • @lukewarm2075
    @lukewarm2075 2 роки тому +1

    Great content just what I was looking for thank you

  • @riverrat9412
    @riverrat9412 3 роки тому +2

    This is the 2nd time I watched through this video. Very informative!

  • @blackknight9156
    @blackknight9156 4 роки тому +4

    I have quartzite in my creekbed, but I find that stuff so darn hard to knap! Then again, I have only been knapping for a few weeks. Great video my friend!

  • @colehunt3478
    @colehunt3478 2 роки тому +1

    Love this!

  • @WannabeBushcrafter
    @WannabeBushcrafter 3 роки тому +7

    Great video and demonstration of local materials that can be made into cutting tools. I use quartz and shell myself. Up around the long island sound, there is a kind of greyish quartz that is super fine grained. It was by far the most workable quartz that I've come upon so far.

    • @Wildernessquestoutdoors
      @Wildernessquestoutdoors  3 роки тому +2

      The more you work it the easier it gets!

    • @WannabeBushcrafter
      @WannabeBushcrafter 3 роки тому

      @@Wildernessquestoutdoors absolutely, also setting up good platforms help as well. One trick I found is to bake coarse grained quartz in a fire it makes it easier to flake. But that fine grained grayish quartz is the best I've worked with so far.

    • @daphneraven6745
      @daphneraven6745 2 роки тому

      @@WannabeBushcrafter : Thank you for introducing this idea. How do you “bake” the stones? Is it a matter of just tossing the stones into the fire? And do you find that the stones need to be in the fire for a certain amount of time or that the fire needs to be fairly intense?

  • @brickmation7877
    @brickmation7877 4 роки тому +3

    thanks, this video helped a lot

  • @karnovtalonhawk9708
    @karnovtalonhawk9708 3 роки тому +3

    was a stonemason for many years. now days its all machines but i liked to do the hammer and chisel thing, just for my personal work and experience. found when working with stone that i new would fracture and maybe go into my eyes that you can get the knack of blinking just as you hit not as good as googles or safety glasses but works pretty well if you have none or working in places glasses/googles fog up. also on the dust thing u can wet stone to cut down on dust rather than putting it under water and on small items good old spit works quite well

  • @IslandHermit
    @IslandHermit 3 роки тому +8

    Thank you! The area I live in is primarily basalt and sandstone, no flint. There is some chert but so far I've only ever find it in small pieces, so I've been looking for information on alternatives and how to identify them.

    • @Wildernessquestoutdoors
      @Wildernessquestoutdoors  3 роки тому +1

      This kind of stuff takes some practice to learn, but once you do it’ll be easy enough to get arrowheads and knives out of it.

    • @IslandHermit
      @IslandHermit 3 роки тому

      @@Wildernessquestoutdoors You briefly mentioned using basalt in the video. I've been able to get some tools from basalt just by smacking it with another rock and looking to see what flies off, but I've so far had no success with more controlled shaping. It doesn't really flake. If you have any experience with that a video on working with basalt would be helpful.

    • @Wildernessquestoutdoors
      @Wildernessquestoutdoors  3 роки тому

      mayaknife it’s in the works.

    • @IslandHermit
      @IslandHermit 3 роки тому

      @@Wildernessquestoutdoors Awesome! I look forward to it.

  • @WHOA-qh5gn
    @WHOA-qh5gn 4 роки тому +2

    Thank you, you answered a question I had about shale and slate which is common where I live. Seems like a very hard material to work with.

  • @Ohiogrown11
    @Ohiogrown11 4 роки тому +1

    Great video! I appreciate the tips. Found the channel via Instagram.

  • @SamtheIrishexan
    @SamtheIrishexan Рік тому +1

    Heat treatment can make alot of these much better for knapping, especially quartzite. I am blessed to live on the Balcones escarpment right off the Edward's plateu. Have a nice honey hole for orange, black, brown, red, and Grey high quality stuff. Still learning to Knapp myself

  • @zyanidwarfare5634
    @zyanidwarfare5634 2 роки тому +1

    This video is super useful, I live in Florida and I don’t really think it would be easy to find flint and I didn’t really want to spend a whole lot on materials, I’m making my own tools for it even, I just needed to find a material I can get myself so I can practice and not go broke

  • @irishwanderer4206
    @irishwanderer4206 4 роки тому +3

    awesome place ..

  • @281covfefe5
    @281covfefe5 4 роки тому +1

    Thnxs for uploading and sharing this info
    Always learn something new !! #FlintknappingTips
    👍🏻🇺🇸

  • @andygossard4293
    @andygossard4293 2 роки тому +1

    I'm going chert hunting tomorrow and I just want to thank you for all the great information.

  • @kevinsolove458
    @kevinsolove458 4 роки тому +4

    Ha, i was immediatly thinkin... you know why you got that antler in the car!! Addicted to napping 👌

  • @fromthepocket601
    @fromthepocket601 3 роки тому +2

    This is really helpful I watched the spear making video and want to try it out here in NE China don’t think there’s flint here so this was really helpful

  • @zeropointconsciousness
    @zeropointconsciousness 2 роки тому +1

    Kind of reminds me of home...Scotland.
    Rocky beaches.

  • @savage22bolt32
    @savage22bolt32 3 роки тому +4

    Very interesting. I want to try knapping, but I really want to forage for materials rather than buy them.
    I was very happy to hear you mention to pick up your scraps. A person could get badly cut stepping on one barefoot.

  • @jzjzjzj
    @jzjzjzj 3 роки тому +1

    good stuff

  • @killintime8431
    @killintime8431 4 роки тому +1

    Thank you sir

  • @Bubba4168
    @Bubba4168 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you very much for making this video. I live in Louisiana and the availability of Flint is not very good. I haven’t done any knapping yet, but I plan to start, and the place I’m going to look for materials is in creeks and rivers.

  • @daphneraven6745
    @daphneraven6745 2 роки тому

    Vision Quest Outdoors: Tyvm 4 some answers, as well as a little vocabulary With which to work.
    About those glacial stones that are uniquely at the shoreline; I find it strange that a glacier would leave those stones at the Waters edge, and possibly in the harbor, but that we don’t see any on the surrounding landscape. It’s somebody who’s seen a lot of North Atlantic storms, I suggest that those huge boulders have been heaved up there by the sea. There are certain coves that you can visit, to observe the difference before and after a huge storm. The beach itself is transformed to the point where you wouldn’t recognize it. In our area, there are times the roads have to be closed because huge boulders get tossed up over the seawall by the sea, utterly blocking the roadway. Overtime, and not a whole lot of that, sometimes they batter down sections of seawall.

  • @garymingy8671
    @garymingy8671 3 роки тому +2

    Eye safety ! Bravo..one strike one chip,,my first of your video s...what tools do you like and why..grinders hanmers; soft hammer s ,quartsote is fun ,and tough...scrappers awls, every one does arrows , what else did they do long ago..any Arty chipping ?

  • @jacobrawles8687
    @jacobrawles8687 2 місяці тому +1

    You would make a great instructor

  • @glennplatvoet7111
    @glennplatvoet7111 Рік тому +1

    You're on it you can make points from silicates and they look great oh and work

  • @GottliebGoltz
    @GottliebGoltz 4 роки тому +3

    I been looking for good sparking flint science in the Boy Scouts 1958.

  • @billb7547
    @billb7547 3 роки тому +1

    Not sure where in CT you were looking, but I suggest Harkness Park in Waterford and Bluff Point in Groton.
    Good luck with your search.

    • @Wildernessquestoutdoors
      @Wildernessquestoutdoors  2 роки тому +1

      Whats at harkness? or bluff point?

    • @billb7547
      @billb7547 2 роки тому

      @@Wildernessquestoutdoors the beaches at both are covered in all sorts of rocky materials brought in by the tides. Neither of those places has a “sandy” beach.

  • @Waltuhh007
    @Waltuhh007 4 роки тому +1

    nice

  • @purduephotog
    @purduephotog 4 роки тому +1

    Perfect! In NY, so Dololmite .... lots of dolomite...

    • @Wildernessquestoutdoors
      @Wildernessquestoutdoors  4 роки тому +1

      Any high quality? Where?

    • @purduephotog
      @purduephotog 4 роки тому

      @@Wildernessquestoutdoors I was hoping you'd had had to work with it. I'm not sure but we brought lots back from a quarry and Herkimer diamond claim. It really doesn't like opening up. Hard as a... Rock I guess.

    • @garymingy8671
      @garymingy8671 3 роки тому

      @@purduephotog Jason ,sorry to be the bearer of bad tidings , rock is often / allways. , Hard as a rock...btw there's tough and brittle..want razor edge stick to brittle stock

    • @purduephotog
      @purduephotog 3 роки тому

      @@garymingy8671 Ahhh, Dolomite is a special kinda of ... pain. It typically just looks at you funny when you hit it with anything. :) Not that I'm into personification or anything...

  • @irishwanderer4206
    @irishwanderer4206 4 роки тому +1

    what better way to watch than with 3 venison steaks chips onions and pepper sauce i was interrupted yesterday when watching the majority of this i have tried ive yet to go to a beach but i do knapp whats around theres some nice gritty rocks that knapp well and very when cooked .

  • @Wildernessquestoutdoors
    @Wildernessquestoutdoors  4 роки тому +18

    What do you think we should focus on next: finding flint? Flintknapping techniques? Travel, exploration? Let me know what you think! 🤔 💭. What was your favorite part or biggest takeaway from this video?

    • @jonathangardner4135
      @jonathangardner4135 4 роки тому +6

      Great vid, loved the part on lithic finds being fragments that had potential use as tools. Biggest takeaway is, usefulness>aesthetics. My vote for next focus is travel/exploration seems like you and the wife have fun doing those.

    • @Wildernessquestoutdoors
      @Wildernessquestoutdoors  4 роки тому +8

      Jonathan Gardner for the most part those have always been looking for flint! Lol I think we are gonna do some camping / exploration few nights in a row vids when the weather is a bit nicer. We need a new tent I destroyed the last one lmao

    • @carmencunningham1660
      @carmencunningham1660 4 роки тому +3

      I think that will be great! Although I just love the flint subject.
      Puerto Rico USA

    • @GottliebGoltz
      @GottliebGoltz 4 роки тому +1

      All one at a time?

    • @dwightehowell8179
      @dwightehowell8179 2 роки тому +2

      You might try demonstrating how to get the most cutting edge out of a piece of found stone.

  • @dwightehowell8179
    @dwightehowell8179 3 роки тому +1

    Some of the stuff you are looking at would work best for Oldowan style use. That is you just knock off sharp flakes from the core you can use to cut with and don't get fancy. Either that or you might try heat treating them.

  • @jayt658
    @jayt658 4 роки тому +2

    I do alot of tile work and constantly have a ton of scrap,any thoughts of using tile as a routine source? Maybe porcelain as opposed to ceramic? Toilets are always getting tossed and i would imagine that since the toilet top and tank are flat and square it would probably be a good resource? Thoughts?

    • @Wildernessquestoutdoors
      @Wildernessquestoutdoors  4 роки тому +1

      Jay T toilet tops work! For sure! Give it a try

    • @garymingy8671
      @garymingy8671 3 роки тому

      I've seen it called Johnstone...it's Goode for beginners..jack crafty has a vid..vitrious , behaves like glass, cuts alot-as in you bleed...perhaps collect the tinted tiles reds and blues an whites..bundle an sell as starter kits...

  • @MrPanchoak
    @MrPanchoak 3 роки тому +2

    How would a good piece of quartzite work as a gunflint, or firestarter?

  • @GottliebGoltz
    @GottliebGoltz 4 роки тому +2

    I'm thinking the Seneca, etc, used it up on arrowheads and tomahawks back when.

  • @carr869
    @carr869 Рік тому +1

    I have huge amounts of quarts in my area. Also I’m finding points made of quarts. Large what believe are spear points and smaller points. I’ve tried to knapp the local quartz. Failed miserably

  • @avinashkannan2632
    @avinashkannan2632 3 роки тому +3

    Will these rocks that you are pointing out, rocks good for flintknapping, also work for sparking on firesteel?

  • @gmol2812
    @gmol2812 10 місяців тому +1

    And please dont forget to take the knapping stone trash/ flakes with you, otherwise u might confuse some archeologists in the future.

  • @devinm.6149
    @devinm.6149 4 роки тому +2

    Do you have a video on finding hammer stones?

    • @Wildernessquestoutdoors
      @Wildernessquestoutdoors  4 роки тому +3

      Devin M. Not yet but I can incorporate that into a video soon.

    • @devinm.6149
      @devinm.6149 4 роки тому +1

      @@Wildernessquestoutdoors that would be great, thanks.

  • @gerardmcquade9102
    @gerardmcquade9102 6 місяців тому +1

    can you do knapping with acrylic sheets?

    • @Wildernessquestoutdoors
      @Wildernessquestoutdoors  6 місяців тому

      I’ve never tried it. Let me know if it flakes

    • @gerardmcquade9102
      @gerardmcquade9102 6 місяців тому

      @@Wildernessquestoutdoors im just thinking about cheap things i can buy or even using glass because im in a wheelchair and can't go to beaches to find these things

  • @peaches-kz4hz
    @peaches-kz4hz Рік тому +2

    Has anyone ever told you that you sound like hiccup from how to train your dragon?

  • @lostpony4885
    @lostpony4885 Рік тому +1

    Ima go to petsmart for a bit of antler i saw em there as chew toys

  • @artichoke890
    @artichoke890 2 роки тому +1

    My wife calls seagulls flying rats. Well they do terd everywhere.

  • @Sheepdog1314
    @Sheepdog1314 2 роки тому +2

    Nothing here in New Hampsha. ..

  • @unforkyours3lf730
    @unforkyours3lf730 3 роки тому +1

    Best flirting video awesome video

  • @moosekababs
    @moosekababs 4 роки тому +2

    awesome video, but your audio levels are a little wonky. The music you put in for transitions is really nice but compared to your voice it is VERY loud.

    • @Wildernessquestoutdoors
      @Wildernessquestoutdoors  4 роки тому +2

      Sorry about that

    • @moosekababs
      @moosekababs 4 роки тому +2

      @@Wildernessquestoutdoors no worries! I just wanted to let you know. :> Thank you for sharing your knowledge with us!

  • @carr869
    @carr869 Рік тому +1

    Forgot to mention I’m in SC

  • @antimatteranon
    @antimatteranon 6 місяців тому +1

    funnily enough these rocks are always on people's driveways.

  • @thetruther6269
    @thetruther6269 3 роки тому +1

    I heard somewhere you can knapp porcelain , so old china dishes and old toilets should work , there's probably old time porcelain sinks at a junkyard. but I don't know, maybe you can't make anything from it.

  • @esben181
    @esben181 4 роки тому +2

    I have heard that flints that have been exposed to frost cannot be used for knapping. I cannot find anywhere online that confirms this statement though.

    • @Wildernessquestoutdoors
      @Wildernessquestoutdoors  4 роки тому +3

      You can use them, they are just really difficult and damaged..... takes a lot of patience to remove the ruined material

    • @jessewilson8676
      @jessewilson8676 4 роки тому +2

      Heat treat them allow to cool slowly then reheat cool slowly again 2 or three times is all you need.

    • @garymingy8671
      @garymingy8671 3 роки тому +1

      One very good knapper is " freeze cracked"...I don't remember him chatting about it. Ask him in the comments of his latest video , rock degrades slowly , beware ,then try to strike off the damaged part ,early if not first , ...you want relible..and comming in the door you got doupts...

  • @lostpony4885
    @lostpony4885 Рік тому +1

    The one that pooped on the car looks tasty

  • @scinanisern9845
    @scinanisern9845 9 місяців тому +1

    I hear tell flint can be found as nodules in limestone deposits... your comment?

  • @louisemissouri4410
    @louisemissouri4410 3 роки тому

    The resistance of a grainy stone would be horrible as an arrowhead. Hope you find larger quartz

  • @bullscrazyadventures9941
    @bullscrazyadventures9941 2 роки тому

    I am so interested in knapping, but I don't know where to start. Can you pls direct me? I do alot of kayaking and magnet fishing, so i have access to the material, but I need a starting point, like names of tool's, technique, and what tools to use.

    • @Wildernessquestoutdoors
      @Wildernessquestoutdoors  2 роки тому +1

      How to make your own flint knapping gear TOOL kit!
      ua-cam.com/video/mfYRzlEeJoQ/v-deo.html
      Start at this video, check out huntprimitive on UA-cam as well he has a beginners video

    • @bullscrazyadventures9941
      @bullscrazyadventures9941 2 роки тому

      @@Wildernessquestoutdoors awesome! Thank you very much bro!!!

  • @mathewlittlejohns3198
    @mathewlittlejohns3198 3 роки тому +1

    flint me up baby!

  • @chuckbailey6835
    @chuckbailey6835 3 роки тому +1

    I guess you should have fed him

  • @davidtidwell5312
    @davidtidwell5312 4 роки тому +6

    Is shell dust more dangerous than rock dust?.

  • @sirjackjackal1042
    @sirjackjackal1042 4 роки тому +9

    If all else fails you can use beer bottles, old broken plates and mugs etc

    • @Wildernessquestoutdoors
      @Wildernessquestoutdoors  4 роки тому +2

      Thats what I started on, however since I USE the stone tools, glass and ceramics, obsidian.... do not last long. Chert does! Flint does!

    • @tiffanythelioness5067
      @tiffanythelioness5067 3 роки тому

      Allot of people don't know this

    • @tiffanythelioness5067
      @tiffanythelioness5067 3 роки тому

      Glass might be more effective if you ask me

  • @abstractapproach634
    @abstractapproach634 3 роки тому +1

    I respext you man, I'd respect you more if you would have thrown away the shotgun shell and plastic. But your doing cool stuff man., keep it up.

  • @cjfilenius1446
    @cjfilenius1446 2 роки тому +1

    Next stone lol

  • @SuperZ71silverado
    @SuperZ71silverado 3 роки тому +2

    It’s a cat

  • @LaydlesLife
    @LaydlesLife 2 роки тому

    The only difference between Quartz, Quartzite and Flint/Chert is the crypto-crystalline makeup of each stone, Flint being super fine grained silica which is a fancy way of saying Quartz Sand. Really disagree with you on these materials not working or even looking the same, when almost all of my locally sourced material is Quartzite and can be made into even better knapping stone than anyone would ever care to imagine with just a little bit of heat treat.. Just my two cents and I don't mean to seem like Mr. Knowitall, but I am when it comes to these three types of rocks lol P.S. a "grinding" stone or abrading stone is useless for pressure flaking my man, it's used on big spalls to round off weak edges and drive longer thinner flakes, no sense in dulling a point before micro-flaking to make it sharper

  • @sodalines
    @sodalines 4 роки тому

    there is 0 knappable stones in maryland. Quartz is here but its not great to knap.

    • @Wildernessquestoutdoors
      @Wildernessquestoutdoors  4 роки тому +2

      The ancients in maryland had trouble as well! There is jasper source buts it’s deep under water now

    • @sodalines
      @sodalines 4 роки тому

      @@Wildernessquestoutdoors yea. and the states around me there is nothing much too. pa. as some. and wv. has some chert i think. You can knap quortz but its super hard. and im not that good.

  • @Bringmeoneofthosechickens
    @Bringmeoneofthosechickens 3 місяці тому +1

    32:20 ASMR heaven