My daughter and granddaughters have been hunting with me this spring and we have found many points and broken points. Passing the love of history onward.
Has anyone offered an explanation as to why hunting on farmland has a higher yield than, say, hunting in the woods or in creeks? Is it simply because the ground cleared and overturned? And if so, does that mean that other settings like woods or meadows have as many points to find, but are just hidden by foliage and leaf litter? Just genuinely curious to better understand how the First Nations hunted and lived hundreds of years ago.
In my opinion, anywhere the ground is disturbed has the potential to produce an artifact. The reason people find them in creeks is due to bank erosion into ancient sites. There are so many undisturbed artifacts laying just under the surface of woods and meadows but we may never see them.
Awesome thanks for sharing 👍😊
Nice finds, man !!!
Bummer on the white broke one..✌🍀⛏⛏
Outstanding find brother👍🇺🇸
Thanks my friend. Hope all is well.
Awesome finds .nice material.keep up the hard work. It's brutal in Texas rt now.keep the water handy
Definitely a beauty!!! Found a white one identical to that. It was very nicely worked
That one point alone made venturing out in the heat totally worth it. What a beauty!
Thanks for sharing! Hope to see more from the dig site this summer. Be well.
My daughter and granddaughters have been hunting with me this spring and we have found many points and broken points. Passing the love of history onward.
That’s what it’s all about.
Nice hunt Tom. Stay hydrated buddy. Peace
Thanks for sharing
Thanks for watching.
Looking forward to your dig site videos
Nice find!!
Thanks!
Looks like an Ashtabula.
That’s what I was thinking👍🏻
I know what you mean but the base was a bit untypical. Thanks for your opinion though.
Well all in all it was a good hunt👍
Real nice!!
Has anyone offered an explanation as to why hunting on farmland has a higher yield than, say, hunting in the woods or in creeks? Is it simply because the ground cleared and overturned? And if so, does that mean that other settings like woods or meadows have as many points to find, but are just hidden by foliage and leaf litter? Just genuinely curious to better understand how the First Nations hunted and lived hundreds of years ago.
In my opinion, anywhere the ground is disturbed has the potential to produce an artifact. The reason people find them in creeks is due to bank erosion into ancient sites. There are so many undisturbed artifacts laying just under the surface of woods and meadows but we may never see them.
@@commissionertom it just blows my mind to think about the number of artifacts out there, waiting to be found. 🤯
Oh man- that's a smoker ! How close are you to Wellington ?
Not very close.
How far away are you from a water source?
A shame on that broken Adena