My lease in Comanche County has provided years of artifact hunting opportunities. Most of the finds are flint (arrow heads, drills, lots of scrapers, the "tang" end of a corner tang knife, etc.). I have located three separate areas that have lots of hard sandstone type rocks. Some of these have been fashioned into tools.
The tools might just seem like rocks to the casual observer. But, the beveled or chiseled edges and points indicate human altering of the rocks. They also fit the hand (always the right hand; left handed Indians must have been converted to right hand early on).
Anyway, I have enough stuff to place groups of tools or large single tools on here each day for about a week. So, stay tuned for new photos each day. If you enjoy this stuff half as much as I do, we should have lots to talk about. I look forward to opinions and thoughts from the Outdoor Board.
The tools might just seem like rocks to the casual observer. But, the beveled or chiseled edges and points indicate human altering of the rocks. They also fit the hand (always the right hand; left handed Indians must have been converted to right hand early on).
Anyway, I have enough stuff to place groups of tools or large single tools on here each day for about a week. So, stay tuned for new photos each day. If you enjoy this stuff half as much as I do, we should have lots to talk about. I look forward to opinions and thoughts from the Outdoor Board.