A tool workshop with a view.
I took a trip to the desert a couple of months back and during a lunch break discovered a Late Stone Age tool manufacture spot.
The spot had an awesome view.
From this vantage point you could manufacture your stone implements and at the same time keep an eye on game movements along the river bank below.
The pile of chips would have been made by Southern Africa's Hunter gatherers the Khoisan.
When you find a manufacture spot there will be a lot of irregular chips.
These are the initial flakes that are made to shape the stone into a usable core.
Once the core is shaped then blades can be struck from it. One typically only finds the broken ones since these are the first ones made in finalizing the shaping of the core. The good ones are flaked off as and when needed likely somewhere else.
Blades are characterized by having a triangular or trapezoidal cross-section and a flat underside, as shown here, in the ones pictured above, that have been flipped over.
Blades are made from a prepared core as shown below.
By making blades you can get far more sharp, usable, cutting surface that from just making a single handaxe. Blades and blade cores are a very distinctive characteristic of the later periods of the stone age; and demonstrate a far more efficient use of good quality stone material.
Below is a picture of a reconstructed core, reconstructed by someone with far more patient than me. It shows just how many blades can be struck from a single rock and how the undersides or the previous blade forms the top side of the next blades.
Once the core has been shaped, it can be carried around and blades struck off it at will, as and when they are required.
That way you simply carry a shaped and lighter rock around with you instead of a pocketful of brittle razor blades just waiting to slice your fingers and pocket.
This way they are also as sharp as a scalpel when you need them and they would only take a couple of seconds to produce when required to butcher a kill.
Interesting!
This is the difference between a traveler and a tourist right here, You are a true traveler.
We have many tourist steemers taking photos of their cheeseburgers and snacks of the day but very few like you, Nice post.
I like your definition...
Really interesting, people may not have had the same technology back then, but they were very smart and resourceful!
That's a pretty awesome find dude. Very interesting, your content is fascinating! Thanks for sharing
@gavvet - It is amazing to be able to actually spot this sort of stone age tool manufacturing spot. I think I have been blind to all such clues in the past when I wandered on the mountains! I wish I had your blog then. I am going to keep my eyes open now for irregularly shaped chips like that and also for trapizoidal shapes. Also - I am blown over to see what an ingenious way our ancestors carried the cone shaped rock and struck so many blades from it!
Thank you for this informative blog. Upvoted.
Update at my end is that I am doing a 'Photospeak' series with my memories from Africa - with just a photo with minimal words - Letting the picture speak for itself mostly. I would be honored if you can take a look at latest one when you have time and provide your valuable comments. Thanks
It amazes me how skilled those people were. We could never compete with them, yet we are considered to be smarter.
@Gavvet I voted up and resteem your post.
Here's mine.
https://steemit.com/machinelearning/@yehey/terminating-costly-fraud-the-rise-of-machine-learning-by-que-com
@Yehey
@gavvet very great full and informativ post here and also His Upvote is very higher than last my dear @vm2904 your comment is very short... ha ha ha
Thanks
Nice post
Follow @dannolly
Good one but that looks like a coal....is it?
No it's a very dark piece of fine grained quartz
wow.. cannot imagine the life back then... how they live their life .. must bea very difficult but very simple life.. your post is great..
have a nice day
What an amazing place which probably had loads of history behind it.
Nature holds so many purposes that sometimes we don't even realise.
I don't have the greatest eye but I think I know what would make a good blade.
Great Photographs @gavvet
hey @ gavvet, it's really interesting how blades got produced back then. Actually the fact that they carried around a specially prepared stone is completely new to me :) I always thought they shaped them out of one stone and whenever it broke had to make a new one spending hours every time... Now I know better :)
Great post @gavvet, is it the Orange river in the top picture?
Yup, that's the Orange, this was on the Namibian side