Medium Hammerstone

medium hammerstone tool for percussion flintknapping
medium hammer stone tool for hard percussion
medium hammerstone in hand
multiple medium hammerstones with ruler for scale
percussion flint knapping using a medium hammer stone
traditional abo percussion hammer stone size comparison
medium hammerstone tool for percussion flintknapping
medium hammer stone tool for hard percussion
medium hammerstone in hand
multiple medium hammerstones with ruler for scale
percussion flint knapping using a medium hammer stone
traditional abo percussion hammer stone size comparison

GoKnapping

$5.00 
SKU: TLS134

Semi-round medium natural hammerstone ranging in weight from 5 to 9 ounces; Primarily used for early, rough bi-facing on small to medium material.

Our current batch of hammerstones are naturally smoothed and rounded by water currents and tumbling over hundreds of years. These are primarily composed of basalt, and are a bit softer than quartzite hammerstones. Ideal for early bi-facing on high quality spalls of heated cherts or volcanic material.

Hard hammerstones are particularly unforgiving for delicate percussion use, and will destroy a fragile blade easily with one misplaced strike. All of our hammerstones have been hand sorted for size, shape, and consistency of material to avoid defects that would cause them to break prematurely, however any violent strikes into hard material or badly prepared platform will speed up any tool failure.

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Traditional tools are also known by flint knappers as 'abo' tools (derived from the word aboriginal). These terms refer to tools that are made of natural materials and are similar in function to the implements used by our stone tool making predecessors throughout the course of human technological development. Examples of other abo tools include hammerstones of various densities and shapes, antler tine flakers, rib bone flakers, lashed flakers, wood billets, sandstone edge modifiers, and billets created from the base or 'crown' section of antler.

Flint knapping with traditional tools is immensely rewarding, though challenging to use and not the easiest to learn with. There remains something to be said for recreating the process that is largely accepted as one of the most important technological advances in human history with nothing more than items found on the forest floor.