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Lithic reduction



 
 
Lithic reduction involves the use of a hard hammer precursor, such as a hammerstone
Hammerstone

In archaeology, a hammerstone is a hard cobble used to strike lithic flakes off a lump of tool stone during the process of lithic reduction. Often, a hammerstone is made of a material such as limestone or quartzite, is often ovoid in shape , and develops telltale battering marks on one or both ends....
, a soft hammer fabricator (made of wood
Wood

Wood is an organic material; in the strict sense wood is produced as secondary xylem in the stems of woody plants, notably trees but also shrubs, etc....
, bone
Bone

Bones are rigid organ that form part of the endoskeleton of vertebrates. They function to move, support, and protect the various organs of the body, produce red blood cell and white blood cells and store minerals....
 or antler
Antler

Antlers are the usually large and complex horn -like appendages of most deer species, mostly worn by males in true horns. Each antler grows from an attachment point on the skull called a pedicle....
), or a wood or antler punch
Punch (engineering)

A punch is a hard metal rod with a shaped tip at one end and a blunt butt end at the other that is usually struck by a hammer. A variety of punches are used in engineering, but often the purpose is to form an impression of the tip on a workpiece....
 to detach lithic flake
Lithic flake

In archaeology, a lithic flake is a "portion of rock removed from an objective piece by percussion or pressure," and may also be referred to as a chip or spall, or collectively as debitage....
s from a lump of tool stone
Tool stone

In archaeology, a tool stone is a type of stone that is used to manufacture stone tools. Generally speaking, tools that require a sharp edge are made using cryptocrystalline materials that fracture in an easily-controlled Conchoidal fractureal manner....
 called a lithic core
Lithic core

In archaeology, a lithic core is a distinctive Artifact that results from the practice of lithic reduction. In this sense, a core is the scarred nucleus resulting from the detachment of one or more lithic flakes from a lump of source material or tool stone, usually by using a hard hammer percussor such as a hammerstone....
 (also known as the "objective piece"). As flakes are detached in sequence, the original mass of stone is reduced; hence the term for this process. Lithic reduction may be performed in order to obtain sharp flakes, on which a variety of tools can be made, or to rough out a blank for later refinement into a projectile point
Projectile point

In archaeology, a projectile point is an object that was hafting and used either as knife or projectile tip or both, commonly called an arrowhead....
, knife, or other object.






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Lithic reduction involves the use of a hard hammer precursor, such as a hammerstone
Hammerstone

In archaeology, a hammerstone is a hard cobble used to strike lithic flakes off a lump of tool stone during the process of lithic reduction. Often, a hammerstone is made of a material such as limestone or quartzite, is often ovoid in shape , and develops telltale battering marks on one or both ends....
, a soft hammer fabricator (made of wood
Wood

Wood is an organic material; in the strict sense wood is produced as secondary xylem in the stems of woody plants, notably trees but also shrubs, etc....
, bone
Bone

Bones are rigid organ that form part of the endoskeleton of vertebrates. They function to move, support, and protect the various organs of the body, produce red blood cell and white blood cells and store minerals....
 or antler
Antler

Antlers are the usually large and complex horn -like appendages of most deer species, mostly worn by males in true horns. Each antler grows from an attachment point on the skull called a pedicle....
), or a wood or antler punch
Punch (engineering)

A punch is a hard metal rod with a shaped tip at one end and a blunt butt end at the other that is usually struck by a hammer. A variety of punches are used in engineering, but often the purpose is to form an impression of the tip on a workpiece....
 to detach lithic flake
Lithic flake

In archaeology, a lithic flake is a "portion of rock removed from an objective piece by percussion or pressure," and may also be referred to as a chip or spall, or collectively as debitage....
s from a lump of tool stone
Tool stone

In archaeology, a tool stone is a type of stone that is used to manufacture stone tools. Generally speaking, tools that require a sharp edge are made using cryptocrystalline materials that fracture in an easily-controlled Conchoidal fractureal manner....
 called a lithic core
Lithic core

In archaeology, a lithic core is a distinctive Artifact that results from the practice of lithic reduction. In this sense, a core is the scarred nucleus resulting from the detachment of one or more lithic flakes from a lump of source material or tool stone, usually by using a hard hammer percussor such as a hammerstone....
 (also known as the "objective piece"). As flakes are detached in sequence, the original mass of stone is reduced; hence the term for this process. Lithic reduction may be performed in order to obtain sharp flakes, on which a variety of tools can be made, or to rough out a blank for later refinement into a projectile point
Projectile point

In archaeology, a projectile point is an object that was hafting and used either as knife or projectile tip or both, commonly called an arrowhead....
, knife, or other object. Flakes of regular size that are at least twice as long as they are broad are called blade
Blade (archaeology)

In archaeology a blade is a type of stone tool created by striking a long narrow lithic flake from a stone lithic core.Blades are defined as being flakes that are at least twice as long as they are wide and that have parallel or subparallel sides and at least two ridges on the dorsal side....
s. Lithic tools produced this way may be bifacial
Biface

In archaeology, a biface is a two-sided stone tool, manufactured through a process of lithic reduction, that displays lithic flake scars on both sides....
 (exhibiting flaking on both sides) or unifacial
Uniface

In archeology, a uniface is a specific type of stone tool that has been flaked on one surface only. Such tools can be placed into two general classes: 1) modified flakes and 2) formalized tools, which display deliberate, systematic modification of the marginal edges and were often formed with a definite purpose in mind....
 (exhibiting flaking on one side only).

Cryptocrystalline
Cryptocrystalline

Cryptocrystalline is a rock Texture which is so finely crystalline, being made up of such minute crystals, that its crystalline nature is only vaguely revealed even microscopically in thin section by transmitted polarized light....
 or amorphous stone such as chert
Chert

Chert is a fine-grained silica-rich microcrystalline, cryptocrystalline or microfibrous sedimentary rock that may contain small fossils. It varies greatly in color , but most often manifests as gray, brown, grayish brown and light green to rusty red; its color is an expression of trace elements present in the rock, and both red and green ar...
, flint
Flint

Flint is a hard, sedimentary rock cryptocrystalline form of the mineral quartz, categorized as a variety of chert. It occurs chiefly as Nodule s and masses in sedimentary rocks, such as chalks and limestones....
, obsidian
Obsidian

Obsidian is a naturally occurring glass formed as an extrusive igneous rock. It is produced when felsic lava extruded from a volcano cools without crystal growth....
, and chalcedony
Chalcedony

Chalcedony is a cryptocrystalline form of silica, composed of very fine intergrowths of the minerals quartz and moganite. These are both silica minerals, but they differ in that quartz has a trigonal crystal structure, whilst moganite is monoclinic....
, as well as other fine-grained stone material, such as rhyolite
Rhyolite

This page is about a volcanic rock. For the ghost town see Rhyolite, Nevada, and for the satellite system, see Rhyolite/Aquacade.Rhyolite is an igneous rock, volcanic rock , of felsic composition ....
, felsite
Felsite

Felsite is a very fine grained volcanic rock that may or may not contain larger crystals. Felsite is a field term for a light colored rock that typically requires petrographic examination or chemical analysis for more precise definition....
, and quartzite
Quartzite

Quartzite is a hard metamorphic rock which was originally sandstone. Sandstone is converted into quartzite through heating and pressure usually related to tectonics compression within orogeny....
, were used as a source material for producing stone tools. As these materials lack natural planes of separation
Cleavage (crystal)

Cleavage, in mineralogy, is the tendency of crystalline materials to split along definite Crystallography structural planes. These planes of relative weakness are a result of the regular locations of atoms and ions in the crystal, which create smooth repeating surfaces that are visible both in the microscope and to the naked eye....
, conchoidal fracture
Conchoidal fracture

Conchoidal fracture describes the way that brittle materials break when they do not follow any natural cleavage . Materials that break in this way include flint and other fine-crystalliteed minerals, as well as most amorphous solids, such as obsidian and other types of glass....
s occur when they are struck with sufficient force. The propagation of force through the material takes the form of a Hertzian cone
Hertzian cone

A Hertzian cone is the cone of force that propagates through a brittle, amorphous or cryptocrystalline solid material from a point of impact, eventually removing a full or partial cone....
 that originates from the point of impact and results in the separation of material from the objective piece, usually in the form of a partial cone, commonly known as a lithic flake
Lithic flake

In archaeology, a lithic flake is a "portion of rock removed from an objective piece by percussion or pressure," and may also be referred to as a chip or spall, or collectively as debitage....
. This process is predictable, and allows the flintknapper to control and direct the application of force so as to shape the material being worked.

Removed flakes exhibit features characteristic of conchoidal fracturing, including striking platform
Striking platform

In lithic reduction, the striking platform is the surface on the proximal portion of a lithic flake on which the detachment blow fell; this may be natural or prepared....
s, bulbs of force, and occasionally eraillure
Eraillure

In lithic analysis , an eraillure is a small secondary flake removed from a lithic flake's bulb of applied force, which is a lump left on the ventral surface of a flake after it is detached from a core of tool stone during the process of lithic reduction....
s (small secondary flakes detached from the flake's bulb of force). Flakes are often quite sharp, with distal edges only a few molecules thick, and can be used directly as tools or modified into other utilitarian implements, such as spokeshave
Spokeshave

A spokeshave is a tool used to shape and smooth wooden rods and shafts - often for use as wheel spokes, chair legs ,or arrows. It can also be used to carve canoe paddles....
s and scraper
Scraper (archaeology)

In archaeology, scrapers are uniface tools that were used either for hideworking or woodworking purposes. Whereas this term is often used for any unifacially flaked stone tool that defies classification, most lithic analysts maintain that the only true scrapers are defined on the base of use-wear, and usually are those which were worked on t...
s.

Techniques


Percussion reduction

Percussion reduction, or percussion flaking, refers to removal of flakes by striking a core
Lithic core

In archaeology, a lithic core is a distinctive Artifact that results from the practice of lithic reduction. In this sense, a core is the scarred nucleus resulting from the detachment of one or more lithic flakes from a lump of source material or tool stone, usually by using a hard hammer percussor such as a hammerstone....
 or other objective piece, such as a partially formed tool, with a hammer or percussor. Alternatively, the objective piece can also be struck against a stationary anvil
Anvil

An anvil is a manufacturing tool, made of a hard and massive block of stone or metal used as a support for chiseling and hammering other objects, such as in forging iron and steel items....
-stone, known as bipolar
Bipolar

Bipolar is a term used to define things with two poles. It can refer to:In Medicine* Bipolar disorder and its subtypes:** Bipolar I...
 percussion. Percussors are traditionally either a stone cobble or pebble, often referred to as a hammerstone
Hammerstone

In archaeology, a hammerstone is a hard cobble used to strike lithic flakes off a lump of tool stone during the process of lithic reduction. Often, a hammerstone is made of a material such as limestone or quartzite, is often ovoid in shape , and develops telltale battering marks on one or both ends....
, or a billet made of bone, antler, or wood. Often, flakes are struck from a core using a punch, in which case the percussor never actually makes contact with the objective piece. This technique is referred to as indirect percussion. (Andrefsky 2004:12)
Hard Hammer

Hard-Hammer percussion
Hard hammer techniques are generally used to remove large flakes of stone. Early flintknappers and hobbyists replicating their methods often use cobbles of very hard stone, such as quartzite. This technique can be used by flintknappers to remove broad flakes that can be made into smaller tools. This method of manufacture is believed to have been used to make some of the earliest stone tools ever found, some of which date from over 2 million years ago.

It is the use of hard-hammer percussion that most often results in the formation of the typical features of conchoidal fracture
Conchoidal fracture

Conchoidal fracture describes the way that brittle materials break when they do not follow any natural cleavage . Materials that break in this way include flint and other fine-crystalliteed minerals, as well as most amorphous solids, such as obsidian and other types of glass....
 on the detached flake, such as the bulb of percussion and compression rings (Cotterell and Kamminga 1987:986)

Soft-Hammer percussion
Soft-hammer percussion involves the use of a billet, usually made of wood, bone or antler as the percussor. Flakes produced in this manner are generally smaller and thinner than those produced by hard-hammer flaking; thus, soft-hammer flaking is often used after hard-hammer flaking in a lithic reduction sequence to do finer work.

In most cases, the amount of pressure applied to the objective piece in soft-hammer percussion is not enough for the formation of a typical conchoidal fracture. Rather, soft-hammer flakes are most often produced by what is referred to as a bending fracture, so-called because the flake is quite literally bent or "peeled" from the objective piece. Flakes removed in this manner lack a bulb of percussion, and are distinguished instead by the presence of a small lip where the flake's stiking platform has separated from the objective piece (Andrefsky 2005:18-20; Cotterell and Kamminga 1987:690).

Pressure flaking

Pressure Flaking
In lithic reduction
Lithic reduction

Lithic reduction involves the use of a hard hammer precursor, such as a hammerstone, a soft hammer fabricator , or a wood or antler Punch to detach lithic flakes from a lump of tool stone called a lithic core ....
, pressure flaking is a method of trimming the edge of a stone tool
Stone tool

A stone tool is, in the most cave general sense, any tool made of Rock . Although stone-tool-dependent cultures exist even today, most stone tools are associated with prehistoric societies that no longer exist....
 by removing small lithic flake
Lithic flake

In archaeology, a lithic flake is a "portion of rock removed from an objective piece by percussion or pressure," and may also be referred to as a chip or spall, or collectively as debitage....
s by pressing on the stone with a sharp instrument rather than striking it with a percussor. This method, which often uses punches made from bone or antler tines (or, among modern hobbyists, copper punches or even nails), provides a greater means of controlling the direction and quantity of the applied force than when using even the most careful percussive flaking. Usually, the objective piece is held clasped in the flintknapper
Flintknapper

Knapping is the shaping of flint, chert, obsidian or other stone through the process of lithic reduction to manufacture stone tools, strikers for flintlock firearms, or to produce flat-faced stones for building or facing walls, and flushwork decoration....
's hand, with a durable piece of fabric or leather protecting the flintknapper's palm from the sharpness of the flakes removed. The tip of the flaking tool is placed against the edge of the stone tool and pressed hard, removing a small linear or lunate
Lunate

Lunate is a term meaning crescent or moon-shaped. In the specialized terminology of lithic reduction, a lunate flake is a small, crescent-shaped lithic flake removed from a stone tool during the process of pressure flaking....
 flake from the opposite side. In some instances, a hammer and punch is used while the tool is held down with a vice. The process also involves frequent preparation of the edge to form better platforms for pressing off flakes. This is usually accomplished with abraders made from a coarse-grained stone such as basalt
Basalt

Basalt is a common extrusive volcanic rock. It is usually gray to black and fine-grained due to rapid cooling of lava at the surface of a planet....
 or quartzite
Quartzite

Quartzite is a hard metamorphic rock which was originally sandstone. Sandstone is converted into quartzite through heating and pressure usually related to tectonics compression within orogeny....
. Great care must be taken during pressure flaking so that perverse fractures
Termination type

In lithic reduction, termination type is a characteristic indicating the manner in which the distal end of a lithic flake detaches from a lithic core ....
 that break the entire tool do not occur. Occasionally, outrepasse
Termination type

In lithic reduction, termination type is a characteristic indicating the manner in which the distal end of a lithic flake detaches from a lithic core ....
 breaks occur when the force propagates across and through the tool in such a way that the entire opposite margin is removed.

The use of pressure flaking facilitated the early production of sharper and more finely-detailed tools. Pressure flaking also gave toolmakers the ability to create where the objective piece could be bound more securely to the shaft
Shaft

Shaft can refer to:Long narrow passages:* Elevator shaft* Ventilation shaft* Pitch , a significant underground vertical space in caving terminology...
 of the weapon
Weapon

A weapon is a tool used to apply or threaten to apply force for the purpose of hunting, attack or defense in combat, subduing enemy personnel, or to destroy enemy weapons, equipment and defensive structures....
 or tool
Tool

A broad definition of a tool is an entity used to interface between two or more domains that facilitates more effective action of one domain upon the other....
 and increasing the object's utility.

See also

  • Lithic analysis
    Lithic analysis

    In archaeology, lithic analysis is the analysis of stone tools and other chipped stone Artifact using basic scientific techniques. At its most basic level, lithic analyses involve an analysis of the artifact?s morphology, the measurement of various physical attributes, and examining other visible features ....
  • Lithic Technology
    Lithic Technology

    In archeology, lithic technology refers to a broad array of techniques and styles to produce usable tools from various types of stone. The earliest stone tools were recovered from modern Ethiopia and were dated to between two-million and three-million years old....
  • Stone Age
    Stone Age

    The Stone Age is a broad prehistory time period during which humans widely used Rock for toolmaking.Stone tools were made from a variety of different kinds of stone....
  • Flintknapper
    Flintknapper

    Knapping is the shaping of flint, chert, obsidian or other stone through the process of lithic reduction to manufacture stone tools, strikers for flintlock firearms, or to produce flat-faced stones for building or facing walls, and flushwork decoration....