- Flint tool
Chipped stone tools were made by
stone age peoples worldwide.Paleolithic tools were relatively simple, repeated small flakes being struck or pressed from a cobble or nucleus until the required shape was achieved. This is called knapping.Freshly made
Mesolithic chipped stone tools are very sharp, much sharper than thebronze or eveniron blades that eventually replaced them. However they were brittle and easily damaged and could not be easily sharpened. Mesolithic stone tools were, perhaps, the first disposable mass-produced commodity. However, during Neolithic times highly polished blades were valuable tools which were routinely resharpened by careful flaking away from the cutting edge, by repolishing, or by a combination of both.By the
Neolithic inEurope the manufacture ofchert andobsidian blades had become a highly skilled industry (seeTool stone ).Polished stone axes
During the
Neolithic period, large axes were made from flintnodule s by chipping a rough shape, a so-called "rough-out". Such products were traded across a wide area. The rough-outs were then polished to give the surface a fine finish to create the axe head. Polishing not only increased the final strength of the product but also meant that the head could penetrate wood more easily.Such axe heads were needed in large numbers for forest clearance and the establishment of settlements and farmsteads, a characteristic of the Neolithic period. There were many sources of supply, including
Grimes Graves inSuffolk ,Cissbury inSussex andSpiennes nearMons inBelgium to mention but a few. In Britain, there were numerous small quarries indownland areas where flint was removed for local use, for example.Many other rocks were used to make stone axes, including the
Langdale axe industry as well as numerous other sites such asPenmaenmawr andTievebulliagh inCo Antrim ,Ulster . In Langdale, there manyoutcrop s of thegreenstone were exploited, and knapped where the stone was extracted. The sites exhibit piles of waste flakes, as well as rejected rough-outs. Polishing improved themechanical strength of the tools, so increasing their life and effectiveness. Many other tools were developed using the same techniques. Such products were traded across the country and abroad.Modern uses
The invention of the
flintlock gun mechanism in the sixteenth century produced a demand for specially shaped gunflints. The gunflint industry survived until the middle of the twentieth century in some places, including in the English town of Brandon [Clarke, R (1935), The Flint-knapping Industry at Brandon, "Antiquity", vol. IX]For specialist purposes glass knives are still made and used today, particularly for cutting
thin section s forelectron microscopy in a technique known asmicrotomy . Freshly cut blades are always used since the sharpness of the edge is very great. These knives are made from high-quality manufacturedglass , however, not from natural raw materials such as chert or obsidian. Surgical knives made fromobsidian are still used in some delicate surgeries.In fiction
* The "
Earth's Children " series byJean M. Auel focuses heavily on the making of stone tools.References
See also
*
Eolith
*Handaxe
*Ficron
*Ovate handaxe
*Bout-coupé
*Burin
*Microlith
*Microburin
*Scraper
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