Ohio History Journal

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THE MANUFACTURE AND USE OF ABORIGINAL

THE MANUFACTURE AND           USE OF ABORIGINAL

STONE IMPLEMENTS.

 

PROBABLY no other equal area in the Union has fur-

nished so great a number and variety of the so-called

"Indian Relics," as has been found within the southern

half of Ohio and the adjacent portions of Kentucky and

West Virginia.

Although few persons have made any particular study

of them, curiosity in regard to them is active among all

classes, and the successful collector often finds life made

a burden by continual questions concerning the source of

the material of which they are made, the method of their

manufacture, and the uses to which they were put. To

answer these questions fully, would require a large

volume; but it is possible to enlighten the mystery con-

siderably without laying such a tax on the reader's

patience, and I shall endeavor here to assist both the

collector and his questioner.

It may be not amiss to state at the beginning, that I

spent two winters in carefully studying the collection of

the Bureau of Ethnology in preparing a paper on the

"Types and Geographical Distribution of Stone Imple-

ments," which will appear in a future volume of their

reports; and the present article is based largely upon that

paper, though, of course, a very brief abstract of it.

There being no perceptible difference in material,

form, or finish, between specimens from mounds and those

of the same class found on the surface, the explanation

that belongs to the one will apply equally well to the

other.

While the articles of bone and wood are comparatively rare

among these relics, their scarcity must be attributed to

their perishable nature; for when we remember the ease

with which they are wrought, it is reasonable to suppose

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