What is a Clovis arrowhead look like?

Clovis arrowheads have concave base and convex sides. The broadest areas for Clovis arrowheads are situated either in the near midsection or toward the base of the point. Clovis arrowheads are usually crafted out of stone or chert. Clovis arrowheads have typical slender blades and have parallel curved edges.
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How do you identify a Clovis point?

Clovis points are wholly distinctive. Chipped from jasper, chert, obsidian and other fine, brittle stone, they have a lance-shaped tip and (sometimes) wickedly sharp edges. Extending from the base toward the tips are shallow, concave grooves called “flutes” that may have helped the points be inserted into spear shafts.
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Are Clovis arrowheads valuable?

Clovis arrowhead is by far the rarest arrowhead worldwide, with only about 10,000 of them ever found. These rare arrowheads are worth a fortune, ranging from hundreds to thousands of dollars!
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Where are Clovis arrowheads found?

Clovis points were first discovered near the city of Clovis, New Mexico, and have since been found over most of North America and as far south as Venezuela.
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Where are most Clovis points found?

Clovis points, which were made early in the Paleoindian period, have been found throughout North America, most often associated with the bones of mammoths. Folsom points were made later, and they are found mostly in the central and western parts of the continent, often in association with the bones of bison.
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Clovis Arrowhead Novaculite



How do you identify a Clovis arrowhead?

Clovis arrowheads have concave base and convex sides. The broadest areas for Clovis arrowheads are situated either in the near midsection or toward the base of the point. Clovis arrowheads are usually crafted out of stone or chert. Clovis arrowheads have typical slender blades and have parallel curved edges.
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How big is a Clovis point?

Clovis Points can range from two to nine inches long and are one to two inches wide. The most distinguishing feature of a Clovis Point, however, is the flute, which is a small groove roughly an inch long at the base of the tool.
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How can you tell if an arrowhead is real?

Examine the surface of the arrowhead. Authentic arrowheads feature flake scars where pieces of the rock were hit away. These scars are normally curved; however, if the arrowhead is very old, these scars may be smoothed over. If this is the case, examine the surface of the arrowhead with a magnifying glass.
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Are old arrowheads worth anything?

Well-made, authentic arrowheads from the Clovis or Folsom eras can easily bring $5,000 to $10,000 each, while equally fine Late Prehistoric arrow points may bring $100, making age a most crucial factor.
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What are the oldest arrowheads?

Currently, the oldest evidence for the use of the bow and arrow are small stone points found in Sibudu cave in South Africa, which are some 64,000 years old.
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What is the rarest arrowhead?

The most expensive arrowhead ever sold went for $276,000. It was both prehistoric and made of green obsidian, a rare stone.
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How much is a fluted Clovis worth?

Entered with a $200,000-$400,000 estimate, the Rutz Clovis did not disappoint, selling to a Texas collector for $276,000.
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Which is older Folsom or Clovis?

Clovis is dated to 13,000 to 12,700 years ago and Folsom after that.
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Is it illegal to sell arrowheads?

It is illegal and unethical to collect artifacts on public lands. Artifacts include anything made or used by humans including arrowheads and flakes, pottery, basketry, rock art, bottles, coins, metal pieces, and even old cans.
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What do you do if you find an arrowhead?

Leave it be or face possible fines and jail time. Illegal to keep artifacts on public land, but there is a loophole if you find an arrowhead on the surface of the ground.
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Are arrowheads a good investment?

Priced at a premium, but one of the best in the field

Therefore, investors should realize an investment in Arrowhead Pharmaceuticals is a high-risk, high-reward play. Whether it's a buy likely depends on each individual investor's appetite for risk.
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How do I sell my arrowheads?

You can sell them to ancient artifact buyers, use a website that fosters the sale of authentic ancient artifacts or sell them on your own through an online store or at an artifact event. Services like ArrowheadsUSA.com and Arrowheads.com remove a lot of the legwork. They will appraise and sell or buy your goods.
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How old is the average arrowhead?

Making and Fitting an Arrowhead

Arrowheads can be as much as 14,000 years old, and when someone today finds one, it's likely that he or she is the first person since the original maker to touch it!
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What are white arrowheads made of?

Most arrowheads were made from various stones such as flints, obsidian, and chert; however, wooden and metallic ones have also been found. Native Americans made arrowheads using a chipping process called flint knapping.
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How many different types of arrowheads are there?

American Indians made the arrowheads or “projectile points” about 500 A.D. However, archaeologists discovered that stone arrowheads existed way back in the Middle Paleolithic Levallois and were used by both the Neanderthals and Early Modern Humans.
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Why did the Clovis disappear?

They are called Clovis points. These spear tips were used to hunt large game. The period of the Clovis people coincides with the extinction of mammoths, giant sloth, camels and giant bison in North America. The extinction of these animals was caused by a combination of human hunting and climate change.
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What is the oldest Native American artifact?

The oldest reliably dated artifact turned out to be the 8500-year-old projectile point found in Wisconsin.
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What is a Clovis spear?

Clovis spear points are among the oldest stone points found in America, ranging in age from about 9500 to 8000 BC. They are characterized by grooves, or "flutes," on both faces that extend from the base of the lanceolate point towards the tip. The flutes appear to have helped attach the point securely to a spear shaft.
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What does fluted mean in Arrowhead?

Fluting is a specific technique that involves the extraction of an elongated flake along the length of a projectile point, leaving a distinctive groove or depression at the base of the spearhead or arrowhead.
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How do you appraise arrowheads?

The Arrowheads.com Appraisal Process

appraisal. For a photo-based appraisal, please send clear photos of your items along with a ruler included in the photo for size reference. Based on your photos we will appraise your artifacts and email you back with our estimated value.
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