Minnesota Knappers Guild crest THE PLATFORM
-a publication of the Minnesota Knappers Guild-

Editor: Gene Altiere
4329 Peabody Lane
Duluth, MN 55804



VOLUME 4, NO. 2
May, 1992

GUILD NEWS
Since the last newsletter, we heard from a new member, Tim Murphy. The address that Tim sent us was 7380 Buffalo Ridge Rd., Cleves, OH 45002. Unfortunately our correspondence keeps coming back "not deliverable as addressed". HELP! Does anyone out there know Tim? We are sure he will contact us eventually wondering what happened to his $6.00 subscription but it would be nice if he could get "The Platform" before then. We looked in the "Camp Yellow Pages" from "The Flint Knapper's Exchange" but he wasn't listed. For those of you who haven't subscribed to FKE, their address is 11220 Hooper Road, Baton Rouge, LA 70818.
We also heard from Val Waldorf. We had sent Val a letter asking for some help with problems we were encountering with the newsletter. It is amazing how that lady can get so much done and still have time to help us out. Her letter was full of helpful hints that should help us produce a better newsletter. For those one or two of you who might not know Val, she's the editor of "CHIPS", the official publication of Flintknappers' Guild International. This is a fine publication and anyone interested in knapping should be a subscriber (send SASE to CHIPS, p.o. Box 702, Branson, MO 65616
Mike Potter, a new member from Eldon, MO, sent us a letter that we hope to publish in one of the future issues. Mike is rather light hearted (headed?) and his correspondence brought a smile to our face.
Every once in a while we get a backlog of articles but we can assure you that the opposite is more normal. If you send something in and we don't publish is right away, just wait a while, we will get to it. Hugo Nami, our Argentinean MKG member, has an article that we've been trying to get to for several issues! Hang on Hugo, we'll get it in!
We mentioned in the last newsletter that members of MKG had been invited to the 8th Annual Workshop on the Archaeology of the Lake Superior Basin that was held at the University of Minnesota - Duluth on March 13-14. MKG member Gordon Peters was the host for the event. MKG members Betty Dahl, Bill Ross, Tony Romano, Leroy Gonsior as well as the editor were present to hear archaeologist from throughout the region talk about the hundreds of paleo artifacts they brought to the conference. It was a pleasure for those of us who are not archaeologists to be accepted and be able to exchange information and ideas with these professionals.

***MKG KNAP-IN, PINE CITY, JUNE 27-28***

*The following article has been reprinted from the Institute for Minnesota Archaeology Quarterly Newsletter, Vol.4, #3, September, 1989. Our thanks to the IMA for giving us permission to use it.
-Ed.


Ice Age Hunters In Minnesota

by Orrin C. Shane III
Science Museum of Minnesota


When the ancestors of American Indians crossed the Bering Land Bridge and entered North America from Asia 15,000 years ago, much of the continent was gripped by glacial ice of the great Laurentide Ice Sheet. This ice sheet covered much of the northeastern North America, and in the Midwest extended across Minnesota to about Des Moines, Iowa. The southwestern and southeastern corners of Minnesota were ice-free as was an area around Wolf Creek in central Minnesota. The unglaciated areas supported little vegetation and few animals, and were unsuitable at this time for human occupation.

By 11,300 years ago, when people we call "Paleo-Indians" spread over much of North America south of the Laurentide ice, most of Minnesota was ice-free. The southern part of the state was probably covered by open spruce parkland (a mixture of trees and grasses), occupied by large game like woolly mammoth, mastodon, giant elk, horse, giant bison, caribou, muskox, giant beaver, deer, elk and moose. Evidence that these animals attracted Paleo-Indian hunters include finds of Clovis fluted projectile points in parts of southern Minnesota and adjacent Wisconsin.

What is a Clovis fluted point and how was the distinctive fluting on these points produced?


Clovis fluted points take their name from a site near Clovis, New Mexico, where they were found with extinct animals and dated to about 11,500 to 11,000 years ago. Only a few examples have been found in Minnesota, and so far only from the southern-most counties of the state. The largest and smallest Clovis points found so far in the state are shown in Figures 1A and B. Figure 1A is from the University of Minnesota collection, and was found in Rock or Noble County Minnesota. Figure 1B is from a private collection, and was found in Murray County. These illustrations were drawn for the Science Museum of Minnesota (SMM) by Mr. Ken Sander.

Clovis and other fluted points have distinct flake scars on one or both faces created by the removal of one or more long "channel flakes". Channel flakes are detached from the face of a point by striking a blow with a stone or bone hammer directed at a prepared striking platform at the base on the point. This striking platform takes the form of a carefully prepared "nipple", as shown in figure 1H. This specimen, from Fillmore County, shows a Clovis point from which one flute was successfully removed from one face. A nipple-like striking platform was then formed at the base of the point, but the point broke, much to the probable dismay of the knapper, before the second flute could be detached.

Figure 1E shows another fluted point from which one flute was successfully removed, but which broke when an attempt was made to remove the second flute. The drawing of the obverse face of this point shows that the striking platform for the obverse flute has been completely removed the preparation of the nipple-like striking platform for the removal of the flute from the reverse face.

By 10,500 to 10,000 years ago, Minnesota was completely free of glacial ice, with much of the state covered by conifer forest and grassland. An extinct form of bison somewhat larger than modern buffalo roamed the state. These were apparently hunted by the descendants of Clovis hunters who made a new style of fluted projectile point. These points are usually called Folsom points, after a bison kill site in New Mexico where they were first identified.

Figures 1C-E show several find examples of Folsom points from Minnesota, all illustrated by Ken Sander for the SMM. Figures 1C and D are from the University of Minnesota collection, and were found in Southwestern Minnesota. Figure 1E is from a private collection, and was found in Washington County, northeast of St. Paul. Figures 1F-H show three Folsom points from the vicinity of Albert Lea, Minnesota. These examples, owned by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, were illustrated for the SMM by
Mr. Alan Hage.

Figure 1. Stone projectile 
points found in Minnesota

After about 10,000 years ago, fluting seems to have gone out of style in Minnesota and elsewhere in North America, although large several unfluted lanceolate points were still being made. Several varieties of lanceolate points, or "plano" points as they are called by some archaeologists, have been identified and described. One variety is the Browns Valley point, named for points found with a human skeleton at Browns Valley, Minnesota in 1933. Figures 1I and J show two Browns Valley points from Traverse County, Minnesota, both illustrated by Alan Hage. Another "plano" type is the Hell Gap point, named after type specimens from the Hell Gap site in Wyoming. Figure 1K is a Hell Gap point from Lincoln County, Minnesota, drawn by Ken Sander for the SMM.

*Since this article was written, the editor is aware that Dr. Shane has had the opportunity to examine a number of fluted artifacts from the Pine City area (Neubauer collection). Also, an article by Romano and E. Johnson describing a bifacially fully fluted, Gunflint silica, Clovis projectile point from the Reservoir Lakes area north of Duluth has been accepted for publication by the "Wisconsin Archaeologist". It is thought to be the most northerly described Clovis point in Minnesota. Ed.


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LITHIC MATERIALS OF SOUTHEASTERN MINNESOTA

PART II

by LEROY GONSIOR


Galena Chert

Galena chert occurs as irregular shaped nodules varying in thickness from one inch to one foot across. It is located in veins reportedly up to 10 feet in thickness. The thickest vein I have examined was a foot thick and was comprised of densely packed chert nodules. Galena chert can be extremely plentiful in loess covered lag deposits in Fillmore County, especially where veins are evident. These surface lag deposits can be followed for miles and were extensively utilized by American Indians. Galena chert is fossiliferous (containing fossils - Ed.) and includes particles 1 to 2 millimeters in size, with inclusions composed of shelly invertebrates, brachiopods (a type of fossil plant -Ed.), and trace fossil burrows (small channels made by worm like animals in the soft material that eventually formed into stone - Ed.) 5 to 10 millimeters in diameter (Withrow 1983:53). The structure is homogenous with few pores. The surface has a dull luster and occasional chalky surface. The trace fossil burrows are highly diagnostic which leads to the easy identification of this material. Under a long wave ultraviolet light, this chert fluoresces into brilliant multicolored hues of orange, yellow and lavender. Galena chert varies in color from a medium gray to a chalky white. Nodules collected from surface lag deposits in Fillmore County have a chalky, dull cortex (outer layer - Ed.) while samples procured from exposed stream beds along the Root River exhibit a brown, polished rind (outer layer - Ed.). Surfaces of heat treated specimens exhibit waxy luster including white or bright red cortex. Galena chert ranges in color from light gray, light brownish gray [5 YR 6/1], to pale reddish brown [10 R 5/4]. Heat treated specimens change to pale red [5 R 6/2], moderate red [5 R 5/4] and [5 R 4/6], grayish red [5 R 4/2], moderate reddish brown [10 R 4/6] or medium gray (Withrow 1983:53).

The Galena Formation is a Middle Ordovician age carbonate deposit extending from Southeastern Minnesota into Iowa, Wisconsin, and Illinois. Three members are recognized in Minnesota, the upper Stewartville, the Prosser, and the Cummingsville members (Austin 1972). The Cummingsville Member is thought to be the chert bearing member in Minnesota since it is equivalent to the chert bearing Dunleith Member in Wisconsin. Many lithic quarry or procurement sites for Galena chert are known in Iowa and Wisconsin including the Bass Site in Grant County, Wisconsin which was utilized extensively during the early Archaic Period to produce Hardin-barbed points (Stoltman 1984). Until the discovery of a concentration of lithic sites in central Fillmore County by the Minnesota Trunk Highway Archaeological Reconnaissance Survey, little was known about the nature and use of this material in Minnesota (Gonsior 1992). Recent research indicates that Galena chert was intensively utilized at archaeological sites within its source area in southeastern Minnesota, and particularly the Root River drainage, but is weakly distributed outside its source area.

Galena chert is a good material for flintknapping, however it is considerably easier to knap after heat treating. Heat treating can be done by placing nodules in an oven at 450 to 500 degrees Fahrenheit for four hours and letting them cool overnight. The high range for heating is about 625 degrees Fahrenheit before damage occurs. Heat treating in pits requires about nine hours of heating with blanks placed three to four inches below the fire. Finding nodules large enough for flintknapping can be difficult since most of the nodules I examined at lag deposits in Fillmore County were small and blocky. Antler billets work well with heat treated specimens while hammerstones perform better with unaltered nodules.

Maquoketa Chert

Maquoketa chert is found in elongated nodules of up to a foot in diameter, although most are smaller and are commonly in the 3 to 6 inch range. The exterior has a sponge like appearance with many small cavities. The interior is comprised of bands which are poorly cemented apparently because of a variable silica content. The structure has splotches or mottling which are apparent when flakes are examined with background light. All the samples examined are a uniform light to medium brownish gray color with a Munsell reading of [7.5 YR 5/1 to 6/2]. The color is difficult to describe since flakes look gray under normal lighting as opposed to the splotches which are amber with a background light, and also because it is a translucent material that does not seem to have a very strong color. When heat treated, the color is a lighter gray to a dirty white color, [7.5 YR 8/1 to 10 YR 7/1]. The splotches remain unchanged as amber or yellowish brown [10 YR 6/6 to 5/6]. Under a long wave ultraviolet light, this chert fluoresces into a bright yellow color with olive gray splotches and an orange cortex on weathered cobbles.

Maquoketa chert is found in the Ordovician age, Clermont Member of the Maquoketa Formation which is described as an arenaceous dolostone (a dolomite formed from more sand-like material - Ed.) with abundant chert (Mossler 1978). Both the Elgin and Clermont members in Minnesota are described as fossil-bearing limestone with alternating shell beds formed in shoal deposits (Bayer 1967). Apparently the only known surface exposures in Minnesota are found in Fillmore County. No fossils were present in the samples examined. Very little is known about the use of this lithic material, some American Indian sites along the South Fork of the Root River, including the Hadland Site, have produced debitage along with some crude, expedient bifaces.

Maquoketa chert is a low grade material that is appropriately termed as tough for flintknapping. The small amount of experimental flintknapping that I have conducted is characterized by frustration. When reducing nodules or bifaces, the bands separate. Heat treating to 500 degrees Fahrenheit improves the workability, but the structural deficiencies remain.

To be continued in the next issue.




Pressure Flaking Pads


BY: JIM REGAN

Most of us get started in flintknapping by learning to pressure flake small birdpoints from thin flakes of flint, obsidian, or even small bits of glass. After doing this for a while you learn through practice how to hold and apply force to achieve longer flakes. The pad used to hold the workpiece and protect the hand from injury while pressure flaking plays a very important part in the ability to remove successful flakes. Much knowledge can be gained from reading books like "The Art of Flintknapping", by D.C. Waldorf, and by watching other knappers whenever possible. My intent here is to pass along some of the ideas that I have found to work through my own experience.
I started originally with a leather pad, as many knappers do, but found it did not provide enough protection from the business end of my flaker. A friend showed me a pad he had made by cutting a rectangular piece of rubber from the side wall of an old tire, which worked quite well. Since old tires are in quite abundance, I had no problem making one of my own. I cut it approximately 2" x 4", and the thickness was about 1/4". Before too long however, I discovered that I could run longer flakes if the stone was not actually touching the pad as the flake tried to run past. I solved this problem quite easily by cutting another pad of the same size, which I then cut a notch in for flake clearance. I used the notched pad next to the point, and the un-notched pad for backup (figure 1).

For convenience, the pads can be clued together with rubber cement, but it is certainly not necessary. The important thing to remember is that you now have a little "trough" which allows the flake to keep on traveling without touching the pad (figure 2). This makes the flake length proportional to your strength and skill level only--not abnormally short because it was pinched by the pad.

Figure 1 Figure 2 Figure 3


Another type of pad which I have used with good success is nothing more than an old terry cloth towel which I folded into a strip about 4" wide and then rolled up tightly into a round cylinder (figure 3). I lay the point lengthwise on the rolled up cylinder, which is comfortable to hold an provides good protection while flaking. This type of pad doesn't seem to cause the flake pinching problem, no doubt because it is much softer than the rubber, and not springy like rubber. If you want to make a more pronounced trough for flake removal, just burrow the tip of your flaker between the point and the pad, at the point where you want the flake to detach. Once again, because the pad is cloth instead of springy rubber, the trough will easily stay in place long enough for you to detach the flake. As you wear a hole in the cloth just unwrap it and refold and wrap it back up in a different direction. This is about as easy as it gets for a pad, plus it costs nothing-just use almost any old rag. The only minor drawback is that you have to keep rewrapping the cloth to keep it nice and tight, since it tends to loosen up after a few flakes.

Figs. 4 and 5 The current flaking pads I use are just a minor improvement on the rubber pads cut from tires. I found a source for neoprene sheet which comes in 1/2" thickness. I can also get it in soft and hard versions. If I'm working on a small delicate points where breakage might be a problem, I will use the stiffer pad, which helps keep the point from flexing while I'm working on it. For most general flaking I like to use the softer pad, because it is easier to hold the point in position against the pad. In either case, however, I make a small trough in the face of the pad for flake removal. There are a couple of ways that you can do this easily. If you have a Dremel tool you can quickly grind the rubber away as required. An Exacto knife also can be used, although it is more difficult to get a nice clean channel with it. One of the easiest ways is to simply heat a large nail red hot over the kitchen range or with a propane torch. While holding the nail with a pair of pliers, let the nail melt into the rubber as required for the channel (it's pretty smelly though, so don't do it inside). See figure 4.


Another note on small, delicate points: If breakage is a problem, make yourself a wooden block that is comfortable to hold and glue a piece of leather to it. You will probably want to cut a notch in the leather for flake removal, as on the previously mentioned pads (see figure 5). The stiffness of the wood should eliminate breakage caused by the point flexing while flaking.
I hope this gives you some help in your own pressure flaking. No doubt there are many other good ideas floating around out there, so I would encourage you to share them with all of us. Why not drop a line to the editor, who will write them up in future issues for all to benefit from.


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MINNESOTA KNAPPERS GUILD
4TH ANNUAL KNAP-IN
JUNE 27-28, 1992

At the

NORTHWEST CO. FUR POST
PINE CITY, MN


Drawings courtesy of
Val Waldorf


FOR MORE INFORMATION: JIM REGAN (612) 462-5568

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