A practically life-long friend (almost sixty years and counting) and I hunted this Mid Archaic site more times than I could begin to count--points, whole and broken were found that would probably number a few thousand (Blunts being so numerous it was silly)--but NEVER another piece like this one. Why--why only one? Being a Mid-to-Late Archiac site, most of the flint was in the form of dart points--never a whole Axe, broken pieces of three-quarter groove axes--but the site produced one Celt and one Plummet. That's what you'd expect from a S.W. Indiana site of that timeperiod. Again, most of the flint found was somewhat side-notched--Brunswicks, Brewerton side notched, types much like that. The flint on this slightly translucent notched piece is Indiana Perry County Derby Flint--a high end chalcedony, 1&11/16" by 1&1/8", and a remarkable 3.5 sixteenths thick. The site is still there, farming, roads, and housing developments have missed it (so far), but the shallow plowing methods mean that you have a snowballs chance in July of finding anything. That's life. Best to all on this May Day--Roy A.
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