3.15 Groundstone Tools

http://resources.ohiohistory.org/First_Ohioans/FOCase24.jpg

Dublin Core

Title

3.15 Groundstone Tools

Description

The people of the Archaic culture, and those who followed them, used a broad range of rocks beyond flint to make their tools. Cobbles of granite, gabbro, diorite, gneiss, porphyry, and slate – originating in the bedrock of Canada – could be found in glacial outwash along most Ohio streams and rivers. When making a tool, the stoneworker first chose a cobble of the right size and weight. He or she then shaped the tool by striking the cobble many times with a hammerstone. Finally, the tool was smoothed using objects with rough surfaces, much as a carpenter uses sandpaper. With this method the toolmaker was able to make a polished axe, adz, or chisel for woodworking, a pestle for grinding nuts, or an ornament to wear. Image number: FOCase24

Publisher

Ohio History Connection

Format

JPEG

Type

StillImage

Identifier

http://resources.ohiohistory.org/First_Ohioans/FOCase24.jpg
http://resources.ohiohistory.org/First_Ohioans/FOCase24.jpg