Our Ending Conquest

Nonfiction, Health & Well Being, Psychology
Cover of the book Our Ending Conquest by Richard John Kosciejew, AuthorHouse
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Richard John Kosciejew ISBN: 9781546259367
Publisher: AuthorHouse Publication: September 21, 2018
Imprint: AuthorHouse Language: English
Author: Richard John Kosciejew
ISBN: 9781546259367
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Publication: September 21, 2018
Imprint: AuthorHouse
Language: English

Early hominids made stone artifacts either by smashing rocks between a hammer and anvil (known as the bipolar technique) to produce usable pieces or through the regulating and directly controlled process as termed flaking, in which stone chips were fractured away from a larger rock striking it with a hammer of stone or other hard material. Subsequently, during the lingering existence of, say, ten thousand years, the diversity in techniques for producing masonry artifacts—including pecking, grinding, sawing, and boring—became additionally familiar. The best rocks for flaking tended to be hard, fine-grained, or amorphous (having no crystal structure) rocks, including lava, obsidian, ignimbrites, flint, chert, quartz, silicified limestone, quartzite, and indurated shale. Ground-stone tools could be made on a wider range of raw material types, including coarser grained rock such as granite.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Early hominids made stone artifacts either by smashing rocks between a hammer and anvil (known as the bipolar technique) to produce usable pieces or through the regulating and directly controlled process as termed flaking, in which stone chips were fractured away from a larger rock striking it with a hammer of stone or other hard material. Subsequently, during the lingering existence of, say, ten thousand years, the diversity in techniques for producing masonry artifacts—including pecking, grinding, sawing, and boring—became additionally familiar. The best rocks for flaking tended to be hard, fine-grained, or amorphous (having no crystal structure) rocks, including lava, obsidian, ignimbrites, flint, chert, quartz, silicified limestone, quartzite, and indurated shale. Ground-stone tools could be made on a wider range of raw material types, including coarser grained rock such as granite.

More books from AuthorHouse

Cover of the book A Different Kind of Sin by Richard John Kosciejew
Cover of the book Paths Taken by Richard John Kosciejew
Cover of the book Unicoi Unity by Richard John Kosciejew
Cover of the book The Wisdom of Our Soul by Richard John Kosciejew
Cover of the book Sunsets of Inverness by Richard John Kosciejew
Cover of the book And Then There Were Two by Richard John Kosciejew
Cover of the book Something Happened ( a True Story of ) Deglovement by Richard John Kosciejew
Cover of the book A Packet of Troubles by Richard John Kosciejew
Cover of the book Mind Games by Richard John Kosciejew
Cover of the book Simply Life.... by Richard John Kosciejew
Cover of the book Chat Bout by Richard John Kosciejew
Cover of the book In the Company of Children by Richard John Kosciejew
Cover of the book Chronicles of the Missing by Richard John Kosciejew
Cover of the book The Book of Elyon by Richard John Kosciejew
Cover of the book Dancing in the Moonlight by Richard John Kosciejew
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy