Another Native American tool that was pretty neat was the needles they would make out of fish bones so the native Indian women could sew clothing and quilts among many other things. They also had special tools and equipment for weaving and bead making, both of which are still very popular among Native American culture to this day. It is usually no beige than a fifty-cent coin. The knife was an essential tool used for cutting meat, hides, wood and food.
It could also be a formidable weapon. A knife was a weapon, tool and eating and cooking utensil all in one. An Indian could use it to put up dwelling, mend moccasins an clothing, make arrows, skin animals, clean fish, build traps, scrape hides, take scalps. It was either carried around the neck on a rawhide string or sheathed at his side. This simple instrument could be crucial in a life or death struggle with man, beast or the elements.
Dudney has a tang knife. He said that it was one of his favorite finds. He took it to the Kansas State Historical Museum and they identified it. It was worn around a male Indians neck on a piece of rawhide. It was a utility knife, like a pocketknife. Dudney found the base of the knife. Every year he returns to the field where he found it, hoping to find the tip of the knife. The maul was made from river rocks.
It was grooved for hafting onto a handle and used like an ax. It is different from an ax, because it has a blunt or rounded end. It can weigh from one to twenty pounds. Dudney told a funny story about his wife and his hammer. She asked hm what it was and he told her about it. He came home one day and found her using it to hammer in nails. A shaft straightener is used to straighten the shaft of the arrow.
The shaft is usually made from branches of wild cherry, birch, ash, chokecherry or willow trees. This wood is harder and more durable that others. The shaft straightener was used to smooth out the imperfections and make it straight.
It was usually made of sandstone, because it is abrasive. Running the ring up and down the shaft until it was perfect used it. It could be used for long hours and not cause a lot of discomfort. It is usually oblong and 4 to 6 inches lond and 3 to 4 inches wide. It was used to grind corn, berries, or seeds to be used for cooking. Pipes are an important symbol to the American Indian. It is used for both secular and ceremonial purposes.
It was usually brought out for group functions like, war rallies, trading, ritual dances, healing ceremonies, marriage negotiations, or to settle a dispute. Tobacco was considered a gift from the supernatural powers to man. A Billet was a bone or antler tool, shaped like a small club, used for flaking Native American Tools. A burin was a tool flaked into a chisel point for inscribing or grooving bone, stone, wood, leather or antler.
A Burin Tool. Borers were small pieces of flint made into tools for piercing holes. A Celt is a term used to describe long thin stone adzes or other axe-like tools. A piece of flint from which flakes are removed from the core to make other stone tools and weapons such as knives, scrapers, spear pints, drills etc.
A drift was a tool usually made of antler, which was used in the indirect percussion flaking process in which flakes were removed through impact. A drill was an oblong tool made of flaked stone and used in drilling holes in hide, wood or leather. Flaking Tool.
A flaking tool, such as an antler billet or drift, used in removing flakes during the making of Native American Tools tools and weapons. Ground stone tools. These tools were usually made of basalt, rhyolite, granite stones whose coarse structure made them ideal for grinding other materials, including plants and other stones.
They were used in conjunction with other tools to make adzes, celts, and axes. A graver was a small tool with a sharp tip that was used to engrave stone, bone, or wood. A hammerstone was a hard, often oblong or rounded stone, used in flint knapping. The jawbone of a buffalo or a horse was used by the Plains Native to create a weapon called the jawbone club. Tools which were flaked to form one or more cutting edges.
Small, narrow blades used in combination for various tools where they are attached to wooden shaft to make arrows, reaping tools, harpoons, drill bits. A long, narrow blade, usually less than 2 inches long. Native American Symbols. Native American Stories. Native American Culture. History of Native Americans. Famous Native Americans. Native American Life. Native Indian Art. Native American Women. Native Indian Weapons. American Indian Artifacts. Indian Warfare. Native American Weapons. How to make a Bow.
Bows and Arrows. Gunstock Club.
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