I am about to make a batch of arrows the european mesolithic style. Not replicas or anything of scientific ambition, more of apocalyptoish science fiction.
They will be display arrows, but I want them to be fully functional down to spine and mass.
Studying the actual finds from bogs, where some arrow shafts lasted over the millenia, I find typical lenghts of 40 to 44 inches.
I then tested shafts of that lenght for spine and get to numbers around 80 to 90 for a 60#@28" draw and quite a wide bow. These shoot straight. They weigh around 1000 grains.
I have a pair of historical Papua arrows that pretty much match these numbers, you can see them here on my blog (it's german, but few words anyway).
https://zweiraben.wordpress.com/2014/11/02/alter-papua-bogen/ I looked at other primitive arrows, especially oceanic and amazonic arrows often are in this range. Often These are not fletched, but mesolithic arrows seem to show "traces of bindig for a fletching"
This is quite far from the arrows I use. When I shoot them, they are slower than my usual 29" 600 grains arrows. But accurate nevertheless.
Since I don't hunt (no legal bowhunting here), I thought I'd ask you guy what you think about it.
So: any experiences, knowledge about that kind of arrow, any reasons pro or con?