After a lot of looking at pictures, watching videos, and then busting up a few hundred pounds learning the material, I tend to agree that it is what is called Burlington Chert.
What that does not cover is the various grades and levels within the stone itself.
This material comes in grades with almost a compacted clay type texture, that does not break to as fine of an edge, and the edges wear quickly, all the way to edges almost equal to obsidian, that are translucent. It runs from almost blue, to gray, to pure white in color, all of which work differently. Some pieces have almost a flow grain to them, where the angles produce different results from side to side/direction. Almost all pieces exhibit the healed fracture lines, although they may be well hidden until revealed by a flake ending at that point. Sometimes even if they are there, the flakes travel across them anyway. It runs from almost glassy, all the way to the compacted clay texture. In the darker material, it is common for a flake scar to have an orange peal effect.
It isn't different material either, since I can reach down right now and pick up a football sized piece that exhibits both the gray and the white, on the same piece.
Years back, a friend that used to do gem shows with me, gave me a piece of Burlington, that he was using to demonstrate at the show. It is almost pure looking off white, and I reduced it to a pretty thin preform using a tine billet and percussion alone in minutes after I found it. I am assuming this is the difference between heat treating and not. If this stuff worked like that piece did, I could make things no problem, with the tools I already have.
I am collecting enough good solid pieces with most of the junk already removed, and I am going to cook a batch as soon as I get enough good pieces to fill the roaster. I have the ability to take it all the way to white hot, and to slow cool it, but the other stone I tried that with, was weakened to the point it crumbled.