To the native americans who are upset...these men are not disturbing graves or sacred grounds. What they are finding is the equivalent of used shotgun shells and if y'all want to collect our empty casings 1000 years from now, I'll cheer you on.
Yeah I agree Spike these people started very young in life learning how to make things to survive and you can believe every waking moment of their day was focus on making or doing something to get food or survive they had a very hard life good video
Yes I have Native American heritage and have no problem with the way you are finding artifacts. Only time I have a problem is if it is mounds or burial sites. So far you have been respectfully finding the artifacts and showing reverence due to keeping them for your collections. Keep up the good work and would also love to see more pottery pieces shown when found. To me they are just as important. Blessings
You guys sure found some nice artifacts. Points, scrapers, and tools. Lots of wild life out there to see. Some dangerous but all beautiful. Congrats to everyone on their finds.
Great video those tools are interesting, that is a great knife Kenneth found. When they have the cortex on them like that we call them a butted knife here in Texas. That is a nice little pottery rim. It looks like Kenneth found the tool shed. I love the tools. Nice points spike that little cream colored one it looks like they worked it down a bit. I love those turtle back scrapers too that's a nice one. Zach found some nice pieces. I enjoyed the video . Thank you very much Spike,Kenneth & Zach.
Thanks Tommy. I had heard the term "butted knife" before but couldn't remember it. I think my brain was being scrambled in the heat. Thanks again for the great comment.
I am amazed at the different shapes of points that you find. At first I thought different tribes made different shapes. But now I assume they make the shape according to the material they have to work. As well as what they are making. Spear point, scraper, knife, drill... Spike you did a great job on the glamour shots! Glad that ole cotton mouth was more interested in his nap then getting a fang in your calf! A big thank you to all for spending time in the brutal southern heat and taking us along!
Great point about the kids making points I have always thought the same because I find so many small pestles and hammer stones grinders etc. I would tell anyone that came hunting with me that the kids had to help cook and prepare food too if that wanted to eat. Grinding nuts etc. thanks for sharing this I knew they didn’t live very long as well from reading about them.
Awesome Videos. Watched a few of them so far and they are all great. That beetle yall found is called an Eastern eyed clicking beetle. If you push down on the top part of the back it makes a clicking sound. Used to play with those things as a kid. LOL. So glad no one was hurt with that cottonmouth. Those suckers blend so well with the environment sometimes. You won't even know your right up on them until the last minute.
Thanks. It's always good to get back out there. We try to get a video out every two weeks. Its not too hard in the summer but the winter is a challenge sometimes.
I always look forward to your vids. They for the most part show a kinder side of life amidst all the crap goin on out there!! You guys and another out there I really look forward to. And to all the rest out there, I love your vids and finds too!! Keep rockin!! 🇺🇸✌🏻
Great video! Oh the heat is a killer for me! I just can not handle it anymore. So I will just eat my ice cream and watch the masters! Living vicariously through you! Randy I missed you on this hunt buddy! That work sure gets in the way of fun! Kenneth on fire with the knives!! Spikes great point after sifting dirt only . And Zacks pottery piece is incredible! Love the wildlife and drone shots!! I still have video to watch but had to comment. I might be back for another thumbs up!!
Oh My Gosh! There's your Cottonmouth! I dont know about down there but here in western Ky they are being born in this early fall season. I am gonna wait till it gets a little colder to go to any creeks here in these woods. I have just discovered your videos and have subscribed and look forward to watching more. Y'all are awesome! :-)
Beautiful I mean just beautiful intro great editing. I really need to do better & explore this myself. They invited me down there too. Great Host. Very thoughtful and sharing guys. Excited finding history I know the feeling. Thanks for sharing this. Good luck fellas.
Spike, really enjoyed the comment you made about the crudes, I've been trying to explain that to people for a long time, though I don't believe they only lived to 30 some year's old, there isn't a lot of evidence that supports that, when actually they would of been the healthiest people that ever walked this planet. Present day people have proven we're not even close to their level of surviving, even those who claim to be survivalists, most can't survive in the wilderness for a year or half that. Gotta watch for those snakes brother, glad he didn't strike you. Best wishes brother
Thanks Mike. These people were conditioned over thousands of years to live like they did. They were no doubt much more hardy than we are today. Even the best of us. You're probably right about the life expectancy thing. 30 is more or less an exaggeration to make a point. It really depends on what study you read and I have never really put too much faith in studies. GL&HH my friend.
Now...now... Guys should you be stirring up the spirits of these native Americans... You will be cursed now...lol... Some very nice fines...the pottery piece,the nice points...excellent I'd really like to go out hunting artifacts with you guys...
I wish I could send u a picture of my only finds that I found when I was 17 which was 40 years ago! One I found in A Carolina creek and one in Delaware river bank!😊
Thanks for all the hard work yall put into yalls content. I have a little spot that's produced some nice points and a lot of broken ones. The dirt has been disc and spread a lot over the years but theres also part of a bayou that runs along the property and I walked it once and never got lucky along the bayou any pointers as to what to do cause you would think there would be some there somewheres just dont have enough experience in this hobby to know what to look for to know if it's worth search along the bayou again?
Michael Oglesby What we would do is pick a spot on ground out of the flood plain and flat enough to live on (not necessarily the highest ground ) and dig some test holes and sift the dirt through an sifter with 1/2" hardware cloth. When you find debitage, pottery or any other type artifact then that is where you should dig. This isn't a guarantee you're going to find points but it is always a good place to start.
I see the credit for I think the music at the end, but what was the lovely piano piece at the beginning? sounded like Thomas Newman...? Such a great vid..love snakes too.. Greetings from California.
Thanks for watching and for the sub. Please check out some of our other videos. Each one has a different lead in which we use to try to set the mood for the whole video.
Great video Spike and awesome artifacts I went down to my Flintwood Ridge Creek not even 10 minutes and Domo stepped on a moccasin near three foot long I got out of there pretty quick like
Wondering how far your camp is from the water source..? From everyone's experience with hunting bluffs how far is the average bluff camp from water. Is there a spring near, or just a creek ? We have a bluff that sits right above the creek, and it's about a 100 yard walk to reach the water's edge. The nearest spring is about 1/3 mile away. Planning to dig a few test holes.
This particular cam is right on the creek but we have some in Louisiana that are as far away as 100 yards. At one time though the creek ran closer to the site. No spring at this site, just a camp.
Oh man, those knives! I knap flint and obsidian, and I'm working on one right now myself-- those are great inspirations! You know, I've always wondered why people lived such a short time even in peaceful communities that had plenty of food; recently, though, I got a really good explanation from the guide at Casa Malpais, an ancestral Pueblo ruin here in AZ. Apparently when grain, seeds, etc. was ground, the amount of grit that got into the food wore the teeth down by a person's early 30s and they lost them. That meant that the food that they chewed after this wasn't broken down properly for its nutritive elements to be fully absorbed, and what killed them after only a few years beyond their tooth-loss was basically starvation-- they could fill their bellies, but their bodies weren't getting enough benefit from the food to survive. Sad, and a really feasible explanation.
Thanks for the great comment. Yes it is a very feasible explanation for that area. Here in south Mississippi and Louisiana there were no large stones to use as mortars and very few large enough to use as pestles. They were probably using wood. These people didn't have good health care and I'm sure their diet had a lot to do with their young mortality. The big emphasis today is on a "Paleo" diet. I think I'll stick with what I have.
No disease control either. I know the stories about white people bringing diseases that natives had no resistance to but believe me there were plenty that were already here. I would imagine injuries were also deadly, even relatively minor ones. I imagine a broken limb was a death sentence, especially a compound one.
Things I’m scared of...1.snakes 2.snakes. 3. Drawn on eyebrows that look like snakes. 🙂. I’m so happy you didn’t step on the “little” fella, Spike! The scary thing to me is that I would have probably never seen him until I stepped on him. 😩
We figure sooner or later one of us is going to get bitten. Randy always says he hopes it's him and I have to agree with him on that lol. For one thing Randy wasn't with us on this trip and for another Zach doesn't like snakes at all. So if I had gotten bit in that heat that far in the swamp without Randy there I probably would have panicked.
I wouldn't call Knapping a 'trade'. More than likely every male or even some females learned to make their own points and blades. But, also, there could have been one or two masters in each village...
Kyla Norrells You're not sounding stupid at all. It is just a tool that we call a scraper for lack of a better term. No one knows for sure what they were used for. Some may actually have been used to scrape hides are bark from tree limbs thus the term scraper simply because they look like they may have been made for that purpose. They may actually in fact be a preform for another tool or just someone practicing they're knapping skills.
Heartbreaker Relics thank you so much I love watching your videos. My grandmother was a full blood sioux and so I love watching what you guys find and thinking about my great grandfather and if he made things like what y'all find thanks again
Alright!😊 Now that's what real ancient artifact arrowheads and tools are to look like!Some of these they show on random videos look too perfect to have been in the ground or rivers!! Real artifacts should look just like these my friends, old , worn with signs of age and 1,000s of years, time on them!! 👍🏹 thanks!!😊
bobrinck1 First let me tell you that this is not looting. This is on private land with permission, not that we owe you an explanation. So understand the definition of looting before you start throwing the term around so loosely. Next take your SJW bs and go somewhere else.
bobrinck1 now u can't get to the place where my dad found many great points. If he did not look 4 the surface finds they would have been broken by the plow. And never been apriciated.
I apologize for using the word looting. I do know the definition; It was to try and get a response. I will also answer Bob Dealan, who says I am a know nothing troll. I have been doing real archaeology for 12 years. What I do looks nothing like your digging. Do you keep records of your finds? Do you share this information with professionals? You even said in this video that they don't make these artifacts anymore. Do we learn from these finds, or is it just for personal satisfaction?
I don't rightly know how to reply to this because I can't tell if it's serious or if it's just an attempt at humor. I can't pick up on these things in a written message.
Love the intro, I don’t care for snakes but god put them here for a reason, the points are off the chain...that video I told you about they find huge pottery pieces, I figure someone could glue them together, anyway have a nice day 🍦🍭🍪 🐍🦎🦂🐉 🍧🍩🍿
Thanks as always for the great comment. I agree on the pottery from the video. I believe I would be trying to piece some of it back together. I would love to find a pottery vessel some day. Thanks again and GL&HH.
To the native americans who are upset...these men are not disturbing graves or sacred grounds. What they are finding is the equivalent of used shotgun shells and if y'all want to collect our empty casings 1000 years from now, I'll cheer you on.
Thanks Julie. Well said and we appreciate the support and trying to educate some of these folks (few as they are).
Yeah I agree Spike these people started very young in life learning how to make things to survive and you can believe every waking moment of their day was focus on making or doing something to get food or survive they had a very hard life good video
Thanks. That's right. That was surely their education, no math no spelling, just what they needed to survive.
Yes I have Native American heritage and have no problem with the way you are finding artifacts. Only time I have a problem is if it is mounds or burial sites. So far you have been respectfully finding the artifacts and showing reverence due to keeping them for your collections. Keep up the good work and would also love to see more pottery pieces shown when found. To me they are just as important. Blessings
Thanks again and we will keep that in mind.
You guys sure found some nice artifacts. Points, scrapers, and tools. Lots of wild life out there to see. Some dangerous but all beautiful. Congrats to everyone on their finds.
Awesome vid as always. Y’all are some of the only artifact hunters that I know deserves a like before I watch the video!
Thank you so much. That is probably the best comment we have ever gotten.
Great video those tools are interesting, that is a great knife Kenneth found. When they have the cortex on them like that we call them a butted knife here in Texas. That is a nice little pottery rim. It looks like Kenneth found the tool shed. I love the tools. Nice points spike that little cream colored one it looks like they worked it down a bit. I love those turtle back scrapers too that's a nice one. Zach found some nice pieces. I enjoyed the video . Thank you very much Spike,Kenneth & Zach.
Thanks Tommy. I had heard the term "butted knife" before but couldn't remember it. I think my brain was being scrambled in the heat. Thanks again for the great comment.
I am amazed at the different shapes of points that you find. At first I thought different tribes made different shapes. But now I assume they make the shape according to the material they have to work. As well as what they are making. Spear point, scraper, knife, drill...
Spike you did a great job on the glamour shots! Glad that ole cotton mouth was more interested in his nap then getting a fang in your calf!
A big thank you to all for spending time in the brutal southern heat and taking us along!
Thanks and thanks for the great comment. What scared me so much about this snake is that I really thought I had looked good.
Great point about the kids making points I have always thought the same because I find so many small pestles and hammer stones grinders etc. I would tell anyone that came hunting with me that the kids had to help cook and prepare food too if that wanted to eat. Grinding nuts etc. thanks for sharing this I knew they didn’t live very long as well from reading about them.
Exactly! The more one hunts and collects these artifacts the more they begin to understand a little bit about the people that left them behind.
Awesome Videos. Watched a few of them so far and they are all great. That beetle yall found is called an Eastern eyed clicking beetle. If you push down on the top part of the back it makes a clicking sound. Used to play with those things as a kid. LOL. So glad no one was hurt with that cottonmouth. Those suckers blend so well with the environment sometimes. You won't even know your right up on them until the last minute.
Thanks and thanks for the info on the beetle. Ole Zach thought a hummingbird had gotten him lol.
Awesome guys!!! Hate I missed it!!
Thanks Mike. We missed you buddy.
Yes sir another great video keep it up guys
Thanks DW. We appreciate it and GL&HH to you.
Super WOW,I miss watching you guys, great talk a d entertainment.
Why do you miss us? We're still making videos. Just moved from every other Friday to every other Tuesday.
BTW thanks for the compliment.
Good stuff guys...
Thanks!
Beautiful artifacts, productive day!
Thanks and GL&HH.
Very nice You guys are superb!!!! Lucky to have those areas to hunt.
Thank you so very much. We are so lucky to be invited to hunt with these guys on their sites.
Good to see ya back in action!!
Thanks. It's always good to get back out there. We try to get a video out every two weeks. Its not too hard in the summer but the winter is a challenge sometimes.
I always look forward to your vids. They for the most part show a kinder side of life amidst all the crap goin on out there!! You guys and another out there I really look forward to. And to all the rest out there, I love your vids and finds too!! Keep rockin!! 🇺🇸✌🏻
You guys look like you're having more fun than a hog knee deep in slop!! 😁
We are!
Great video brother...that place is special. Some nice artifacts were found to my friend
Congratulations
Keep em coming
Thanks Scott. We appreciate it my friend.
Great video! Oh the heat is a killer for me! I just can not handle it anymore. So I will just eat my ice cream and watch the masters! Living vicariously through you!
Randy I missed you on this hunt buddy! That work sure gets in the way of fun! Kenneth on fire with the knives!! Spikes great point after sifting dirt only . And Zacks pottery piece is incredible! Love the wildlife and drone shots!! I still have video to watch but had to comment. I might be back for another thumbs up!!
Thanks. We appreciate you watching and for always leaving great comments.
Very nice saves
Good work gentlemen
Go get cha some ice cream
Thanks. Man I would sure love to have had a bowl ice cream out there.
He looked big to me sitting there! Lol
Oh My Gosh! There's your Cottonmouth! I dont know about down there but here in western Ky they are being born in this early fall season. I am gonna wait till it gets a little colder to go to any creeks here in these woods. I have just discovered your videos and have subscribed and look forward to watching more. Y'all are awesome! :-)
Thank you so much. We are glad you found us and subbed. We hope you enjoy many more of our videos.
Beautiful I mean just beautiful intro great editing. I really need to do better & explore this myself.
They invited me down there too. Great Host. Very thoughtful and sharing guys. Excited finding history I know the feeling. Thanks for sharing this. Good luck fellas.
Thanks Calvin and thanks for the great comment. GL&HH to you too.
Heck of a day! Some nice ones! 👍
Thanks. We appreciate it. GL&HH
Spike, really enjoyed the comment you made about the crudes, I've been trying to explain that to people for a long time, though I don't believe they only lived to 30 some year's old, there isn't a lot of evidence that supports that, when actually they would of been the healthiest people that ever walked this planet. Present day people have proven we're not even close to their level of surviving, even those who claim to be survivalists, most can't survive in the wilderness for a year or half that. Gotta watch for those snakes brother, glad he didn't strike you. Best wishes brother
Thanks Mike. These people were conditioned over thousands of years to live like they did. They were no doubt much more hardy than we are today. Even the best of us. You're probably right about the life expectancy thing. 30 is more or less an exaggeration to make a point. It really depends on what study you read and I have never really put too much faith in studies. GL&HH my friend.
Cool site and artifact saves! Keep up the good luck!
Thanks. Yeah those guys have more than one site on that creek. We dug another one last week with more great results.
Now...now... Guys should you be stirring up the spirits of these native Americans... You will be cursed now...lol...
Some very nice fines...the pottery piece,the nice points...excellent
I'd really like to go out hunting artifacts with you guys...
Thanks for watching and for the great comment.
I wish I could send u a picture of my only finds that I found when I was 17 which was 40 years ago! One I found in A Carolina creek and one in Delaware river bank!😊
Go to our Facebook page and send it in messenger. People do it all the tme.
I don't know about some ice cream but I was sure smoking down a double quarter pounder. Thanks for another great video!
lol Thanks. That's funny. Thanks for the great comment too!
Thanks for all the hard work yall put into yalls content. I have a little spot that's produced some nice points and a lot of broken ones. The dirt has been disc and spread a lot over the years but theres also part of a bayou that runs along the property and I walked it once and never got lucky along the bayou any pointers as to what to do cause you would think there would be some there somewheres just dont have enough experience in this hobby to know what to look for to know if it's worth search along the bayou again?
Michael Oglesby What we would do is pick a spot on ground out of the flood plain and flat enough to live on (not necessarily the highest ground ) and dig some test holes and sift the dirt through an sifter with 1/2" hardware cloth. When you find debitage, pottery or any other type artifact then that is where you should dig. This isn't a guarantee you're going to find points but it is always a good place to start.
Michael Oglesby and thank you again for the kind words.
Okay I'll definitely try that and see what happens thanks for the advice.
I see the credit for I think the music at the end, but what was the lovely piano piece at the beginning? sounded like Thomas Newman...? Such a great vid..love snakes too.. Greetings from California.
Thanks. Any music credits will be in the description (if required). We get almost all our music from the TH-cam music library.
nice digs!!! I need to dig my spot a lil bit more.
Thanks.
New sub here, nice finds and the beginning was well put together! Keep up the good work and HH
Thanks for watching and for the sub. Please check out some of our other videos. Each one has a different lead in which we use to try to set the mood for the whole video.
Another fantastic set of recoveries!!!! I do a live stream and would love to have y’all on the stream to talk artifacts!
Thanks. That would be great. Contact me either through my FB page or our HR FB page or my email - spike39560@gmail.com.
Heartbreaker Relics I’ll send you something this evening!!!
Gone Diggin Sounds good.
Great video Spike and awesome artifacts I went down to my Flintwood Ridge Creek not even 10 minutes and Domo stepped on a moccasin near three foot long I got out of there pretty quick like
Thanks man. No need to leave after you've already stepped on him lol. Stay and fight him for it!
I didn't notice I messed up on the reply lol I almost stepped on it and hauled butt out of there lol
i found a piece of pottery the other day. or what i think may be. how could i send you a picture to confirm it?
You can send it to our Facebook page.
A question....... can you please tell why these arrow heads are in the river , so many of them there.
Thanks for the question. Over the centuries the arrowheads wash off the ridges and into the creeks and streams. Erosion brings them down.
Thanks for the reply something new I learnt today .... good luck with future finds 😀
that uniface scraper prolly had a piece of wood tied to it for support, they were very innovative people wasn't they
Thanks. Yes they were. They were in every way adapted to their environment.
nice finds. I'm off to work and the job site I'm at today has some potential for some points
Thanks and good luck on the job site finds.
Great finds and glad spike didn't step on Mr Cottonmouth.
Thanks and you and me both lol.
Spike
Wondering how far your camp is from the water source..? From everyone's experience with hunting bluffs how far is the average bluff camp from water. Is there a spring near, or just a creek ? We have a bluff that sits right above the creek, and it's about a 100 yard walk to reach the water's edge. The nearest spring is about 1/3 mile away. Planning to dig a few test holes.
This particular cam is right on the creek but we have some in Louisiana that are as far away as 100 yards. At one time though the creek ran closer to the site. No spring at this site, just a camp.
How do you know if there was a camp there before you start digging
who in the heck thumbs down this video.... so many trolls lol
Indiana Creek Walker I just saw that myself. It's probably some of those folks that hate everything lol.
Oh man, those knives! I knap flint and obsidian, and I'm working on one right now myself-- those are great inspirations!
You know, I've always wondered why people lived such a short time even in peaceful communities that had plenty of food; recently, though, I got a really good explanation from the guide at Casa Malpais, an ancestral Pueblo ruin here in AZ. Apparently when grain, seeds, etc. was ground, the amount of grit that got into the food wore the teeth down by a person's early 30s and they lost them. That meant that the food that they chewed after this wasn't broken down properly for its nutritive elements to be fully absorbed, and what killed them after only a few years beyond their tooth-loss was basically starvation-- they could fill their bellies, but their bodies weren't getting enough benefit from the food to survive. Sad, and a really feasible explanation.
Thanks for the great comment. Yes it is a very feasible explanation for that area. Here in south Mississippi and Louisiana there were no large stones to use as mortars and very few large enough to use as pestles. They were probably using wood. These people didn't have good health care and I'm sure their diet had a lot to do with their young mortality. The big emphasis today is on a "Paleo" diet. I think I'll stick with what I have.
Makes sense to me. Bad general health probably led to tooth loss as well there. Good hunting, guys-- looking forward to the next video!
Thanks.
No disease control either. I know the stories about white people bringing diseases that natives had no resistance to but believe me there were plenty that were already here. I would imagine injuries were also deadly, even relatively minor ones. I imagine a broken limb was a death sentence, especially a compound one.
Keep diggen deeper... looks like a good day ...to hot for me thx
Things I’m scared of...1.snakes 2.snakes. 3. Drawn on eyebrows that look like snakes. 🙂. I’m so happy you didn’t step on the “little” fella, Spike! The scary thing to me is that I would have probably never seen him until I stepped on him. 😩
We figure sooner or later one of us is going to get bitten. Randy always says he hopes it's him and I have to agree with him on that lol. For one thing Randy wasn't with us on this trip and for another Zach doesn't like snakes at all. So if I had gotten bit in that heat that far in the swamp without Randy there I probably would have panicked.
Heartbreaker Relics I rebuke those words!! ✝️
Awesome day. Lots of awesome pieces. Have you tried digging deeper? Looks like sand under the topsoil. Or is it clay?
Thanks. Yes, we have dug much deeper. Down to about four feet in some spots. It is clay below the topsoil layer. We didn't find anything that deep.
I've heard dig till you hit clay. So y'all have done what I've heard. Lol. Love it keep em coming. Love to watch y'all finding stuff when I don't.
Keep on rockin brother
I would like to share some of my findings with y'all. how would I go about doing this
Raymond Bird Thanks. You can go to our Facebook page and post them or send them in messenger.
I wouldn't call Knapping a 'trade'. More than likely every male or even some females learned to make their own points and blades. But, also, there could have been one or two masters in each village...
I think you probably right on that.
I dont want to sound stupid but what is a scraper?
Kyla Norrells You're not sounding stupid at all. It is just a tool that we call a scraper for lack of a better term. No one knows for sure what they were used for. Some may actually have been used to scrape hides are bark from tree limbs thus the term scraper simply because they look like they may have been made for that purpose. They may actually in fact be a preform for another tool or just someone practicing they're knapping skills.
Heartbreaker Relics thank you so much I love watching your videos. My grandmother was a full blood sioux and so I love watching what you guys find and thinking about my great grandfather and if he made things like what y'all find thanks again
Alright!😊 Now that's what real ancient artifact arrowheads and tools are to look like!Some of these they show on random videos look too perfect to have been in the ground or rivers!! Real artifacts should look just like these my friends, old , worn with signs of age and 1,000s of years, time on them!! 👍🏹 thanks!!😊
Thank you for watching and for the great comment!
Maybe they gave the children broken ones to learn with as to not waste resources.
normeonormeo This is very possible and maybe even likely especially after the material was heat treated.
Heartbreaker Relics There is always a story forming in my head as I dig at a bluffshelter in Alabama. They almost speak to me. So satisfying.
normeonormeo I know exactly what you mean.
I am always saddened by the amount of looting of ancient native sites.
bobrinck1 First let me tell you that this is not looting. This is on private land with permission, not that we owe you an explanation. So understand the definition of looting before you start throwing the term around so loosely. Next take your SJW bs and go somewhere else.
bobrinck1 now u can't get to the place where my dad found many great points. If he did not look 4 the surface finds they would have been broken by the plow. And never been apriciated.
I AM ALWAYS SADDENED BY THE AMOUNT OF LOOTING OF MODERN NATIVE SITES (LIKE TH-cam) BY KNOW NOTHING TROLLS LIKE bobrinck1.
NATIVE IS THE INCORRECT TERM ANYWAY AS EVERYONE I KNOW IS NATIVE AND NO ONE I KNOW IS INDIAN.
I apologize for using the word looting. I do know the definition; It was to try and get a response. I will also answer Bob Dealan, who says I am a know nothing troll. I have been doing real archaeology for 12 years. What I do looks nothing like your digging. Do you keep records of your finds? Do you share this information with professionals? You even said in this video that they don't make these artifacts anymore. Do we learn from these finds, or is it just for personal satisfaction?
That stuff is trash I throw that down just crude junk
I don't rightly know how to reply to this because I can't tell if it's serious or if it's just an attempt at humor. I can't pick up on these things in a written message.
I'm playing lol throw it down for me lol
Love the intro, I don’t care for snakes but god put them here for a reason, the points are off the chain...that video I told you about they find huge pottery pieces, I figure someone could glue them together, anyway have a nice day 🍦🍭🍪 🐍🦎🦂🐉 🍧🍩🍿
Thanks as always for the great comment. I agree on the pottery from the video. I believe I would be trying to piece some of it back together. I would love to find a pottery vessel some day. Thanks again and GL&HH.