Beginner question!
Everywhere you look here where I live, there is another broken fragment of chert. It is mostly weathered to where it is full of cracks. I decided to see if I could find anything solid enough to get a usable spall off of, to experiment with.
I found a surface piece about 150 pounds or so, and I quickly knocked off the cracked weathered areas, until I got a nice clean gray face to work. Using a 1 inch soft brass drift, hitting with the end like a ram, I was able to drive blades off the core stone, 4 to five inches in length, 1.5 maximum in width, and curved badly towards the end. I gathered a handful of blades off that face, and brought them home to play with.
If you wanted usable hunting tips, no problem at all. Snap the curved stem, straighten as you work, shorten the thin side back towards the stem, and you have the shape and function of the stemmed type points, but there is little actual knapping artistry involved.
You can work the blades to round the flat face just fine, but when you try to go the other way on the thick side, it drives out short hinges. If you shorten the thin side back, you wind up with a bevel on each edge, or an off center spine, on both sides. The flakes will not run, so you wind up with a diamond shape, with two long sides and two short sides. I was able to strike the end of the stem, and change the triangular shape on that end, but no flakes would travel very far at all.
It ate my wide tipped antler tine when I tried to use it as an indirect punch. I got a piece of main beam, and cut a slot in the end of it. Using it, and a hammer stone, you can drive flakes off, but they don't travel far in one direction, and they hinge out after a short distance going the other way.
If this stone is usable, what tools did you use? I ended up using a soft brass billet and a hammer stone, over a wood surface with a slot cut in it, to remove flakes at all. Even little flakes using pressure are tough to get.
Like I said. Survival points could be made from such blades pretty easily if you accept the triangular shape with a flat side and a ridge on the other, but I would like to actually knap the entire surface of such a point, if that is possible.
Would heating a container of blades maybe change it enough to change the way the material works, or is the material simply too tough for that purpose?
Thanks in advance!