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Stone Tool Technologies South Puget Sound “Arrowheads, Dart Points, and Knives, Oh My!”. Scott Williams, WSDOT State Capital Museum Lecture Series January, 2011. Source: http://courses.washington.edu/uwtoce06/index.html. Source: Suttles and Lane, 1990.
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Stone Tool Technologies South Puget Sound “Arrowheads, Dart Points, and Knives, Oh My!” Scott Williams, WSDOT State Capital Museum Lecture Series January, 2011
Source: Suttles and Lane, 1990
Morphology of Projectile Point Types • Body Shape (the main outline), • Blade Edge Outline, • Shoulder Type, and • Base Type
Paleoindian Period 13,000-11,000 BP
Fluted and Stemmed Thrusting spears are the primary hunting tool
This part gets confusing… • For a period of about 8,000 years there is little change in the archaeological record of stone tools • There is some regional and possible time variations, but they are still poorly understood • The atlatl is the primary hunting weapon in this period
The Mud Bay Site and some of the projectile points found there.
QW-F QW-D Continuum of point use and rejuvenation QW-C
BODY SHAPEBLADE EDGESHOULDER TYPESTEM TYPETYPE Short Isosceles Triangle Excurvate or Straight or Incurvate Stemless “Flat” to Convex to Concave Base Not Applicable HI-B N=22 or + = or + or or Examples:
BODY SHAPEBLADE EDGESHOULDER TYPESTEM TYPETYPE Long Isosceles Triangle Straight or Excurvate Tapered Contracting HI-C N=15 = + or + + Examples:
BODY SHAPEBLADE EDGESHOULDER TYPESTEM TYPETYPE Scalene Triangle Excurvate or Straight or Incurvate Not Applicable Stemless Slope Base HI-D N=15 = + or + or Examples:
BODY SHAPEBLADE EDGESHOULDER TYPESTEM TYPETYPE Straight Sided Lanceolate Stemless Flat or Convex Base Excurvate Not Applicable HI-E N= 6 or = + + Examples:
BODY SHAPEBLADE EDGESHOULDER TYPESTEM TYPETYPE Asymetrical, “Canine,” “Shark Fin” Excurvate And Incurvate, or Excurvate And Straight Rounded or Tapered Contracting HI-H N= 9 (Knife?) + = & or + or + & Examples:
Cladogram derived from Puget Sound site projectile point types creating a phylogenesis tree of Coast Salish site temporal sequencing for approximately 4,000 years (based on PAUP* software (Phylogenetic Analysis Using Parsimony (*and other methods) (Swofford 1998)).
lanceolate point types triangular “drill”-like types small triangular point types Duwamish No. 1 site and Hartstene Island Site major projectile type percentages—note the very close percentage ratios.
Qwu?gwes Projectile Point Types Defined
Hartstene Projectile Point Types Defined
Thanks to: • Drew Crooks and the Capital Museum • Dale Croes, SPSCC • Rhonda Foster and Larry Ross, SIT CRD • Ralph and Karen Munro • Alan Spencer, NRCS • Jeff Flenniken, Lithic Analysts • Washington Department of Archaeology and Historic Preservation