18
Views
28
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Original Articles

From Chopper to Celt: The Evolution of Resharpening Techniques

Pages 33-43 | Published online: 01 Apr 2016

References Cited

  • Ahler, P.A. 1971 Projectile Point Form and Function of Rodgers Shelter, Missouri. Missouri Archaeological Society Research Series, 8.
  • Anderson, Patricia. 1980 Abstract: a microwear analysis of selected flint artifacts from the Mousterian of southwest France. Lithic Technology 9(2): 33“
  • Anderson, Patricia. 1981 Contribution Methodologique a l'Analyse des Microtraces d'Uthlisation sur les Outils Prehistoriques. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Bordeaux.
  • Binford, Lewis. 1979 Organization and formation processes: looking at curated technologies. Journal of Anthropological Research 35: 255–270.
  • Binford, Lewis. 1980 Willow smoke and dogs, tails: hunter-gatherer settlement systems and archaeological site formation. American Antiquity 45: 4–20.
  • Broyles, Bettye. 1971 The St. Albans Site. West Virginia Geological Survey: Morgantown.
  • Butzer, Karl. 1971 Environment and Archaeology:an Ecological.
  • Byrne, Denis. 1980 Dynamics of dispersion: the place of silcrete in archaeological assemblages from the Lower Murchison, Western Australia. Archaeology and Physical Anthropology in Oceania 15: 110–119.
  • Childe, V. Gordon. 1925 The Dawn of Civilization. London, Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co.
  • Childe, V. Gordon. 1942 What Happened in History. New York, Penguin.
  • Clark, Donald. 1980 Relationships of North Pacific and American Arctic centers of slate grinding. Canadian Journal of Archaeology 4: 27–38.
  • Clark, Donald 1982 An example of technological change in prehistory: the origin of a regional ground slate industry in south-central coastal Alaska. Arctic Anthropology 19: 003–25.
  • Davidson, D.S., and Frederick McCarthy. 1957 The distribution and chronology of some important types of stone implements in Western Australia. Anthropos 52: 390–458.
  • Dickson, F.P. 1981 Australian Stone Hatchets. Academic Press: New York.
  • Fitzhugh, William. 1972 Environmental Archaeology and Cultural Systems in Hamilton Inlet, Labrador. Smithsonian Contributions to Anthropology, Number 16. Smithsonian Institution, Waphington, D.C.
  • Goodyear, Albert. 1982 Tool kit entropy and bipolar reduction: A study of inter-assemblage lithic variability along Paleo-Indian sites in the Northeastern United States. Unpublished manuscript on file with the author, Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of South Carolina, Columbia.
  • Hayden, Brian. 1977a Sticks and stones and ground edge axes: The Upper Paleolithic in Southeast Asia?, in Sunda and Sahul: Prehistoric Studies in Southeast Asia, Melanesia and Australia, Jim Allen, Jack Golsdon and Rhys Jones (eds.), pp. 73–109. New York, Academic Press.
  • Hayden, Brian. 1977b Stone tool functions in the Western Desert, in Richard Wright (ed.), Stone Tools as Cultural Markers, 177–188. Canberra, Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies.
  • Hayden, Brian. 1979a Paleolithic Reflections: Lithic Technology and Ethnographie Excavations Among Australian Aborigines. Canberra, Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies.
  • Hayden, Brian. 1981 Research and development in the stone age: technological transitions among hunter-gatherers. Current Anthropology 22: 519–548.
  • Hayden, Brian, and W. Karl Hutchings. 1986 Whither the billet flake? Paper presented at the 51st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, New Orleans, and currently under publication review.
  • Hayden, Brian, and Margaret Nelson. 1981 The use of chipped lithic material in the contemporary Maya Highlands. American Antiquity 46: 885–898.
  • Helms, Richard. 1890 Anthropology. Transactions and Proceedings, Royal Society of South Australia 14: 237–332.
  • Huccell, Bruce. 1979 Of chipped stone tools, elephants, and the Clovis hunters: an experiment. Plains Anthropologist 24: 077–188.
  • Isaac, Glynn, Richard Leakey, and Anna Behrensmeyer 1971 Archaeological traces of earlv Hominid activities, east of Lake Rudolf, Kenya. Science 173: 1129–1133.
  • Johnson, Jay, and Carol Morrow (eds.). 1987 The Organization of Core Technology. Westview Press: Boulder, Colorado.
  • Jones, Rhys. 1977 The Tasmania paradox in Stone Tools as Cultural Markers, Richard Wright (ed.), pp. 189–204. Canberra. Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies.
  • Jones, Rhys 1978 Why did the Tasmanians stop eating fish?, in Richard A. Gould (ed.), Explorations in Ethno-archaeology, 11–47. Albuquerque, N.M., University of New Mexico Press.
  • Keeley, Lawrence. 1980 Experimental Determination nf Stone Tools Uses. Chicago, University of Chicago Press.
  • Lampert, Ronald. 1981 The Great Kartan Mystery. Terra Australis 5. Dept. of Prehistory, Research School of Pacific Studies, Canberra, Australian National University.
  • Lee, Richard. 1969!Kung Bushman subsistence: an input-output analysis, in Environment and Cultural Behavior, Andrew Vayda, (ed.), pp. 47, 49. New York, Natural History Press.
  • Leroi-Gourhan, Andre. 1964 Le Geste et la Parole: Technique et Langage. Paris, Dditions Albin Michel.
  • MacCalman, H.R., and B.J. Grobbelaar. 1965 Preliminary report of two stone-working Ova Tjimba groups in the northern Kaokoveld of South West Africa. Cimbebasia 13.
  • Matson, R.G. 1976 The Glenrose Cannery Site. National Museum of Man Mercury Series, No. 52. Ottawa.
  • Mewhinney, H. 1964 A skeptic views the billet flake. American Antiquity 30: 203–204.
  • Morse, Dan, and Albert Goodyear. 1973 The significance of the Dalton adze in northeast Arkansas. Plains Anthropologist 19: 316–322.
  • Rensberger, Boyce. 1974 The face of evolution. New York Times: Section 4, 3 March: 12–13, 43–6, 52–4.
  • Ritchie, William. 1969 Ground slates: east and west. American Antiquity 34: 385–391.
  • Rolland, Nicolas. 1981 The interpretation of middle Palaeolithic variability. Man 16: 15–42.
  • Sheets, Payson, and Guy Muto. 1972 Pressure blades and total cutting edge: Science 175: 632–634.
  • Shott, Michael. 1986 Technological Organization and settlement mobility: an ethnographic examination. Journal of Anthropological Research 42: 15–51.
  • Sollberger, J.B. 1971 A technological study of beveled knives. Plains Anthropologist 16: 209–218.
  • Tindale, Norman B. 1950 Palaeolithic kodj axe of the Aborigines and its distribution in Australia. Records, South Australian Museum 9: 257–274.
  • Torrence, Robin. 1982 Time budgeting and hunter-gatherer technology. Hunter-Gatherer Economy in Prehistory: A European Perspective, G. Bailey, (ed.), pp. 11–22. Cambridge University Press: Cambridge. (ed.) In press. Time, Energy and Stone Tools. University of Cambridge Press.
  • Tsirk, Are. 1979 Regarding fracture initiations, in Lithic Use-wear Analysis, Brian Hayden, (ed.), pp. 83–96 New York, Academic Press.
  • Walker, Phillip. 1978 Butchering and stone tool function. American Antiquity 43: 710–715.
  • White, J. Peter. 1968 Ston daip bilong tumbuna: the living stone age in New Guinea, in La Prehistoire; Problemes et Tendances, Francois Bordes and Denise de Sonneville-Bordes (eds.) pp. 511–516. Paris, Editions due CNRS.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.