What is a Hardin Arrowhead?

Description: A large size, well made triangular barbed point with an expanded base that is usually ground. Resharpened examples have one beveled edge on each face. Hardin points are believed to have evolved from the Scottsbluff type. Find Hardin's at Arrowheads.com.
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How old is a Hardin Arrowhead?

A characteristic V-shaped notch is usually present at the juncture of the stem and blade. Age: According to O'Brien and Wood (1998:128), Hardin points were probably manufactured sometime between 9750–8950 b.p. (7800–7000 b.c.).
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How old are side notched arrowheads?

Age: 10,500 to 10,000 B.P.
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How old are Hardin points?

Hardin Barbed points are found in the eastern U.S. from Missouri to Ohio & from Wisconsin to Arkansas. They date to the Early Archaic period sometime between 8,000 and 9,500 years ago.
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What is a Thebes Arrowhead?

This is a medium to large triangular corner notched point with a flat to elliptical cross section. The blade may range from straight to excurvate. Heavily re-sharpened examples may have a recurvate blade. Serrations may be seen on the blade of re-sharpened examples.
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The Hardin Point! My Interpretations and some Observations!



What is a Lost Lake Arrowhead?

General Description: The Lost Lake is a medium to large sized corner notched point that is beveled on one side of each face. The type is generally large with deep corner notches that often curve in and up from the edge of the blade. The terminal notch scars usually exhibit semicircular herzian cones.
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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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What is a Hardin point?

Description: A large size, well made triangular barbed point with an expanded base that is usually ground. Resharpened examples have one beveled edge on each face. Hardin points are believed to have evolved from the Scottsbluff type.
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What is a Scottsbluff Arrowhead?

This is a medium to large triangular stemmed point with an elliptical to median ridge cross section. The blade is excurvate. Some examples have the blade curving in at the tip and having parallel sides, while other examples have a triangular excurvate blade.
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How old are arrowheads found in Tennessee?

It's a 10- to 12,000-year-old ceremonial arrowhead from what's called the Paleolithic period. Those qualities, though, bring out the biggest question about the Christmas Star and arrowheads like it.
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What is a Gary Arrowhead?

General Description: The Gary point is a medium sized, triangular bladed point / knife type with indistinct , squared shoulders, and a medium to long, contracting, pointed to rounded stem base. The blade edges are straight to excurvate but sometimes concave or recurvate.
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What is a Guilford Arrowhead?

Typical Guilford points (Figure 1) are lanceolate in form and are most commonly 50-120 mm in length and 20-35 mm in width (Coe 1964). They tend to be thick, lenticular or diamond-shaped in cross section, with a base that can be either concave (56 percent), convex (29 percent), or straight (15 percent).
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How many different types of arrowheads are there?

There are various kinds of arrowheads designed by the Native Americans. Around 1,200 types have been recorded to date. The identification of these arrowheads would let you learn more about the history and way of life of the people who made and used them, which could have dated back thousands of years ago.
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How old are Dalton arrowheads?

The Dalton Tradition is a Late Paleo-Indian and Early Archaic projectile point tradition. These points appeared in most of Southeast North America around 10,000–7,500 BC.
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How old are arrowheads in Illinois?

In a collection assessment meeting on February 22, 2021, at the Warrenville Historical Museum (WHM), Assistant Director of the Illinois State Archaeological Survey Dr. Thomas J. Loebel confirmed that artifacts found in the Mack Collection date back to the Early Archaic Period, some 8,000-10,000 years ago.
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How old is a Scottsbluff Arrowhead?

The sites are distinguished by their campsites, tools and butchering process. The tools, dated between about 6,000 and 8,000 BC, include Cody knives and Scottsbluff and diamond-shaped Eden projectile points.
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What do Clovis point arrowheads 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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Are Clovis points Rare?

Clovis archaeological sites are rare. Points are found at single-episode kill sites, multiple-episode kill sites, campsites, in caches, and as isolated artifact finds. Campsites and caches are extremely rare finds.
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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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How do you tell if it's a real arrowhead?

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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What arrowheads are worth money?

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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How old is a Guilford Arrowhead?

Age: Coe recovered examples from levels above Morrow Mountain points and suggested a date of 6000 BP. John Whatley mentioned that Guilford and Conerly points are probably coeval and reported a date of 5350 BP from the Guilford hearth at a site in Chesterfield County, South Carolina.
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What is a Lerma?

Lerma Round Base. Description of Physical Characteristics and Flaking Pattern: This is a medium to large ovoid point with a flattened to elliptical or diamond cross section. The blade is excurvate with the widest portion of the blade commonly being below the midpoint. Some examples have parallel sides.
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What is a Lanceolate point?

Lanceolate points are identified as “a point with notches or stem that are weak-to-non-existent” (Maryland Archaeological Conservation Laboratory 2012).
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