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A Note on Corner-Tang Artifacts
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 January 2017
Extract
In 1936 a monograph appeared dealing with corner-tang artifacts (Bibliography, 1). Although nothing definite is known as yet about the age and associations of these peculiar artifacts, the author believed them to have developed from spear-points and to have been associated with the chase (skinning knives ?). He furthermore concluded from certain indications that these artifacts belonged to an early horizon. Typologically he distinguished six sub-types (Figure 18).
- Type
- Facts and Comments
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © The Society for American Archaeology 1938
References
1.
Patterson, J. T., The Corner-Tang Flint Artifacts of Texas. University of Texas, Bull., Anthropological Papers, Vol. 1, 4, Austin, Texas, 1936.Google Scholar
2.
Hough, W. A., A New Type Of Stone Knife. American Anthropologist N. S., Vol. 29, No. 2, 1927.Google Scholar
3.
Renaud, E. B., Archaeological Survey Of Eastern Wyoming. University of Denver, 1932.Google Scholar
8.
Brown, Chas. E., Corner-Tang Flint Artifacts. Wisconsin Archeologist N. S., Vol. 16, No. 3, 1936.Google Scholar