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Posted Nov 28, 2009, 12:56:41 PM |
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Got any drills you'd like to show? Post em in here, your favorite, a frame, a collection, let's see some drills.
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" Stay frosty, gents "
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Posts: 4706
Romeotopia
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Reply To This Topic #1 Posted Nov 28, 2009, 01:48:53 PM |
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That last one is a stunner.
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AUT VIAM INVENIAM AUT FACIAM
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Reply To This Topic #2 Posted Nov 28, 2009, 02:21:42 PM |
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Reply To This Topic #3 Posted Nov 28, 2009, 04:01:14 PM |
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Nice drills Jeff, what are you typing the 5th from the left as?
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Posts: 566
Southern Illinois
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Reply To This Topic #4 Posted Nov 28, 2009, 04:08:03 PM |
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Reply To This Topic #5 Posted Nov 28, 2009, 04:59:48 PM |
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Nice drills Jeff, what are you typing the 5th from the left as?
it has some grinding on the sides of the base, i would say that it started out as an archaic stemmed point
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Posts: 1919
Sunshine State.
Detector used: Garrett GTI 2500
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Reply To This Topic #6 Posted Nov 28, 2009, 06:52:36 PM |
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I have a few, the best being from Texas.. The first Ouchita Quartzite is the best..  Molly..
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Life is what you make it.
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Posts: 1609
Southern Ohio
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Reply To This Topic #7 Posted Nov 28, 2009, 08:11:42 PM |
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Here's some pictures of a few of my Drills.
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"Welcome back my friends, to the show that never ends."
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Reply To This Topic #8 Posted Nov 29, 2009, 06:52:13 AM |
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here are what ive found so far in Tn
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Posts: 1087
Oklahoma
Detector used: White's Prizm III and Ace 250
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Reply To This Topic #9 Posted Nov 29, 2009, 08:57:40 AM |
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These are drills found by my grandpa in Northeastern Oklahoma. The first one is my favorite and Neanderthal identified it as being a "Calf Creek" drill---its 4" long! (Sorry about the really long pic!)
~sandcreek~
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"I will give you the treasures of darkness, riches stored in secret places, so that you may know that I am the Lord, the God of Israel, who summons you by name". Isaiah 45:3
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Reply To This Topic #10 Posted Nov 29, 2009, 09:58:28 AM |
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I use to give my wife a hard time about running her feet through the gravel on our hunting trips.........pretty much thought of it as a waste of time. After she kicked this one out in 2006 I quit giving her any trouble.
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Reply To This Topic #11 Posted Nov 29, 2009, 12:31:29 PM |
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Nice looking drills from across the country everyone! Here's a couple more from Kentucky.
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Posts: 836
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Reply To This Topic #12 Posted Nov 30, 2009, 09:44:52 AM |
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here are few I will post some more I think I have a bunch more someplace
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Reply To This Topic #13 Posted Nov 30, 2009, 10:37:02 AM |
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OK............I have posted all of these at one time or another but, these are some drills that I have found. The Fort Ancient piece is actually a heavily resharpened knife. Chuck
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Posts: 836
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Reply To This Topic #14 Posted Nov 30, 2009, 12:06:23 PM |
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thanks pickaway I have some more of those side notched drills should I try to find them and post them on this thread??
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Posts: 872
Detector used: Whites XLT Classic
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Reply To This Topic #15 Posted Nov 30, 2009, 03:29:24 PM |
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Man.... your drills are beautiful!!! I do not have any except for a possible that I just found today. I will post it as a new topic and you guys can be the judge. Great follow up posts to this awesome topic!
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Who looks outward, dreams. Who looks inward, awakes.
Carl Gustav Jung
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I breed scarlet and gray Posts: 1352
fairfield county,ohio
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Reply To This Topic #16 Posted Nov 30, 2009, 04:09:34 PM |
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killer stuff gals and guys.i havent had much luck in the drill dept.got many broken ones.good thread 37,so how many of you are in the camp that believe not all "drills" are drills but are actually exhausted knives?good luck hunting 
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Reply To This Topic #17 Posted Nov 30, 2009, 04:49:28 PM |
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killer stuff gals and guys.i havent had much luck in the drill dept.got many broken ones.good thread 37,so how many of you are in the camp that believe not all "drills" are drills but are actually exhausted knives?good luck hunting  Yeah I'm with you on that, I think alot of heavily resharpened knives are exhausted pieces and often called drills by mistake. You know you have a drill when you see the grinding marks from rotation use. The first " drill " in this pic is imo a heavily resharpened knife, probably a couple resharpenings from drill form. The next four are true drills imo and have the signs of rotation wear on the distal end, the last piece on the right is a salvaged lost lake with a tip worked into a chisel.
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I breed scarlet and gray Posts: 1352
fairfield county,ohio
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Reply To This Topic #18 Posted Nov 30, 2009, 05:06:17 PM |
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very nice examples 37,you are on point on your info 
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Posts: 1919
Sunshine State.
Detector used: Garrett GTI 2500
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Reply To This Topic #19 Posted Nov 30, 2009, 05:36:48 PM |
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killer stuff gals and guys.i havent had much luck in the drill dept.got many broken ones.good thread 37,so how many of you are in the camp that believe not all "drills" are drills but are actually exhausted knives?good luck hunting  Actually most drills aint drills they are clothes pins..especially the knotched types..
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Reply To This Topic #20 Posted Nov 30, 2009, 06:24:21 PM |
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killer stuff gals and guys.i havent had much luck in the drill dept.got many broken ones.good thread 37,so how many of you are in the camp that believe not all "drills" are drills but are actually exhausted knives?good luck hunting  Actually most drills aint drills they are clothes pins..especially the knotched types.. I've heard that theory, clothes pins and even ornamental wear, and ear plugs too. I personally think bone would have been used for this, just my speculative opinion. That's why I'm hesitant to call any piece a drill unless it has the rotational wear use from drilling holes in stone, wood, etc.
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I breed scarlet and gray Posts: 1352
fairfield county,ohio
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Reply To This Topic #21 Posted Dec 01, 2009, 04:32:17 AM |
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killer stuff gals and guys.i havent had much luck in the drill dept.got many broken ones.good thread 37,so how many of you are in the camp that believe not all "drills" are drills but are actually exhausted knives?good luck hunting  Actually most drills aint drills they are clothes pins..especially the knotched types.. you make a good point molly,i do think you and 37 both have valid arguments,i was thinkin kind of the opposite though.i have always thought that alot of the unnotched pieces that have no hafting area were used possibly as pins.are you saying that once the notched point or blade was used up they were used as clothes pins?
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Posts: 2217
Louisiana
Detector used: Fisher CZ7aPro
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Reply To This Topic #22 Posted Dec 01, 2009, 09:32:03 AM |
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Morning,
Here is a nice Dalton "T" drill I found a few years back, and a small pencil drill.
Atlantis
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True contentment hinges not on how much we have, but rather on how much we enjoy what we have. You will find in life there is always someone with more and always many with less. Be content with such things as ye have. Heb 13:5
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Posts: 1919
Sunshine State.
Detector used: Garrett GTI 2500
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Reply To This Topic #23 Posted Dec 01, 2009, 03:08:33 PM |
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killer stuff gals and guys.i havent had much luck in the drill dept.got many broken ones.good thread 37,so how many of you are in the camp that believe not all "drills" are drills but are actually exhausted knives?good luck hunting  Actually most drills aint drills they are clothes pins..especially the knotched types.. you make a good point molly,i do think you and 37 both have valid arguments,i was thinkin kind of the opposite though.i have always thought that alot of the unnotched pieces that have no hafting area were used possibly as pins.are you saying that once the notched point or blade was used up they were used as clothes pins? I "speculate" the exhausted knotched points were used as clothes pegs, to keep clothes together..the reason I think this (& also discussed this with a few pro's I know) is, if I see no polished areas on the tips of the pins/points/drills? then I believe they weren't used as drills. Drills show highly polished areas on them. Well, with reference to your comment about points with no hafting areas being used as pins, again if there is no polished areas, I would say they "could" have been used as pins/ornaments but, pencil drills are commonly known with highly polished tips, so its all down to the polished areas, I guess..jmho. Molly.
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What Would Tecumseh Do? Posts: 511
The Queen City
Detector used: Minelab Explorer II
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Reply To This Topic #24 Posted Dec 02, 2009, 02:49:12 PM |
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Very nice drills people. Here are a couple of mine I like.
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Live your life that the fear of death can never enter your heart. Tecumseh 1798.
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Reply To This Topic #25 Posted Dec 03, 2009, 10:00:48 AM |
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Damn thats a killer dove drill lostlake...
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Dirt Surfer
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Reply To This Topic #26 Posted Dec 03, 2009, 10:04:27 AM |
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huh my past post gone? heres some ive found. 
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Posts: 836
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Reply To This Topic #27 Posted Dec 03, 2009, 12:33:12 PM |
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I keep thinking about how much some of these drills remind me of jet airplanes of all types and sizes all the way back to the first X-15 or before to modern day what do you tnetters think?  Larson1951
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I breed scarlet and gray Posts: 1352
fairfield county,ohio
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Reply To This Topic #28 Posted Dec 04, 2009, 06:59:35 PM |
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I keep thinking about how much some of these drills remind me of jet airplanes of all types and sizes all the way back to the first X-15 or before to modern day what do you tnetters think?  Larson1951 maybe ancient aliens made them??just joking,they do resemble the outline of an x-15 
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Posts: 4045
South East Tennessee
Detector used: Tesoro
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Reply To This Topic #29 Posted Dec 04, 2009, 07:03:38 PM |
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Mine are not worth taking pictures of. You guys have some great stuff. Some reason in this area they were used until broke. Sorry for not being able to contribute. TnMtns
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Most people are born as hunters in one way or another. Does it not make sense that we gather as well. Enjoy the hunt and gather wisely.
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Posts: 961
North Carolina
Detector used: Minelab Sovereign GT
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Reply To This Topic #30 Posted Dec 05, 2009, 02:53:35 PM |
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Here is my humble point, perhaps a drill. I was walking in a field near home today with my 2 yr old and found it. Bryan
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detecting finds, Christmas Tree, Dec 09 014.JPG (99.82 KB, 980x735 - viewed 411 times.)

detecting finds, Christmas Tree, Dec 09 015.JPG (97.93 KB, 980x735 - viewed 405 times.)

detecting finds, Christmas Tree, Dec 09 016.JPG (40.17 KB, 980x735 - viewed 406 times.)

detecting finds, Christmas Tree, Dec 09 017.JPG (61.53 KB, 980x735 - viewed 403 times.)

detecting finds, Christmas Tree, Dec 09 018.JPG (57 KB, 980x735 - viewed 399 times.)
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Posts: 836
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Reply To This Topic #31 Posted Dec 06, 2009, 11:33:39 AM |
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Here are two KRF drills they sure don't compare to the quality of some of the drills posted on this thread but here they are the smaller one sure is sharp Larson1951
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Posts: 324
North Central Ohio
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Reply To This Topic #32 Posted Dec 06, 2009, 07:34:02 PM |
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Nice show everyone!!
I love these show me threads!! Always brings out the good stuff. Here are a few of mine. Most I find are broken , but I have been lucky enough to pick up a few complete ones too.
Twig.
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A bad day of Arrowhead hunting is still better than a good day at work!!
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Reply To This Topic #33 Posted Dec 06, 2009, 08:47:13 PM |
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Good looking handful of drills Twig. I really like the last t drill and the fine black one. Thanks for the addition.
Here's one I found this Sept. with some insitu pics, I started getting excited when I saw the bifurcated base sticking out of the ground, I was surprised it was a drill.
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What Would Tecumseh Do? Posts: 511
The Queen City
Detector used: Minelab Explorer II
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Reply To This Topic #34 Posted Dec 06, 2009, 10:00:22 PM |
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Nice looking drills from across the country everyone! Here's a couple more from Kentucky.
very nice sonora!
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What Would Tecumseh Do? Posts: 511
The Queen City
Detector used: Minelab Explorer II
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Reply To This Topic #35 Posted Dec 06, 2009, 10:01:22 PM |
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OK............I have posted all of these at one time or another but, these are some drills that I have found. The Fort Ancient piece is actually a heavily resharpened knife. Chuck
That is a cool T drill, in-situ to boot!
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I breed scarlet and gray Posts: 1352
fairfield county,ohio
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Reply To This Topic #36 Posted Dec 07, 2009, 03:03:47 PM |
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killer drills larson,twig and 37.i am very jealous.i have had real bad luck in the drill finding department.always broke.thx for sharing the pics 
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Reply To This Topic #37 Posted Dec 08, 2009, 12:03:05 PM |
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Heres 4 of my most "drill like" pieces. I'm sure of the blue grey one but its a double break. The crescent shaped one I always thought of as a scraper but some of the other pics here made me see it as a possible multitool.
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drills.jpg (34.58 KB, 710x422 - viewed 321 times.)
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Reply To This Topic #38 Posted Dec 08, 2009, 04:04:31 PM |
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It's my rock !
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Posts: 836
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Reply To This Topic #39 Posted Dec 09, 2009, 12:57:33 PM |
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all_atv,
they look like knife blades that would fit in a slotted rib bone handle but I do not know if such things were used in your area or not larson1951
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Reply To This Topic #40 Posted Dec 09, 2009, 01:22:21 PM |
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Thanks for keeping this interesting folks.
This is a paddle drill from Shelby county, Ky, material is Fort Payne chert.
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Posts: 173
murray county GA.
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Reply To This Topic #41 Posted Dec 14, 2009, 06:40:35 AM |
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some of mine
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Reply To This Topic #42 Posted Dec 14, 2009, 06:35:21 PM |
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Nice ones jmfg222 
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Posts: 160
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Reply To This Topic #43 Posted Dec 14, 2009, 07:22:40 PM |
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Northern Oklahoma drills all personal family finds.
My wife's Dalton is my fav.
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__________ Call me Sid
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Reply To This Topic #44 Posted Dec 15, 2009, 03:30:20 AM |
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jmfg222, nice looking frame of drills, are they all Ga. pieces?
sidmind, the Dalton is killer, also really like 11 and 1 o'clock.
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Posts: 836
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Reply To This Topic #45 Posted Dec 15, 2009, 11:10:04 AM |
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agate side notch drill could be a re-sharpened point
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Reply To This Topic #46 Posted Dec 15, 2009, 04:09:39 PM |
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Great drills Sidmid & larson, heres a insitu of a drill i found today 12/15. 
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Reply To This Topic #47 Posted Dec 15, 2009, 05:09:30 PM |
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Damn pick, looks like you had a goodun today. That piece of ridge looks alot like your blade. I'd like to see those pieces in hand if you get a chance.
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Posts: 173
murray county GA.
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Reply To This Topic #48 Posted Dec 16, 2009, 12:39:47 PM |
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thirty7 all north GA south TENN.
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Reply To This Topic #49 Posted Dec 16, 2009, 04:32:37 PM |
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Hi everyone, I'm new to this site and really enjoy seeing all the fantastic finds. I have a rather small artifact collection, but thought I would add to this thread. Here's an insitu of a creek find from this year, the color fades to more of a tan when dry. 
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Reply To This Topic #50 Posted Dec 16, 2009, 04:52:02 PM |
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Hey there planB thats a killer drill & insitu Congrats... 
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Reply To This Topic #51 Posted Dec 16, 2009, 06:37:36 PM |
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Nice Plan b, great picture, and heck of a find. Welcome aboard.
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What Would Tecumseh Do? Posts: 511
The Queen City
Detector used: Minelab Explorer II
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Reply To This Topic #52 Posted Dec 19, 2009, 07:59:15 PM |
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OK............I have posted all of these at one time or another but, these are some drills that I have found. The Fort Ancient piece is actually a heavily resharpened knife. Chuck
You know what? That little birdie could be a decatur. Is it ground?
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DIG up EVERYTHING!! Posts: 682
Southern Indiana
Detector used: Whites DFX 300, Vintage Tesoro Sidewinder
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Reply To This Topic #53 Posted Dec 25, 2009, 06:22:51 AM |
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my drill collection
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001.JPG (72.46 KB, 586x364 - viewed 163 times.)
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HH to all, and to all a GH!!!
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Reply To This Topic #54 Posted Jan 11, 2010, 11:21:01 PM |
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These are a few of the last finds from '09 and the only drills I've ever found.
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I breed scarlet and gray Posts: 1352
fairfield county,ohio
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Reply To This Topic #55 Posted Jan 12, 2010, 06:24:15 AM |
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welcome to tnet planB that is a killer relic and killer pic 
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I breed scarlet and gray Posts: 1352
fairfield county,ohio
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Reply To This Topic #56 Posted Jan 12, 2010, 06:25:24 AM |
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real nice collection of drills wildcatman,nice drill find RichPa 
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Reply To This Topic #57 Posted Jan 12, 2010, 09:52:57 AM |
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Killer frame wildcatman!....Nice insitu pic and finds Rich.
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Reply To This Topic #58 Posted Jan 12, 2010, 10:20:49 AM |
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Nice frame littlejohn, you're into some really old stuff down there. What's that middle point, the centerpiece? what a killer!
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I breed scarlet and gray Posts: 1352
fairfield county,ohio
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Reply To This Topic #59 Posted Jan 12, 2010, 10:27:46 AM |
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nice frame littlejohn,is that a peisker diamond(did i spell that right?)in the center of the frame?dont think i have seen one posted here on tnet,killer relic 
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I breed scarlet and gray Posts: 1352
fairfield county,ohio
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Reply To This Topic #60 Posted Jan 12, 2010, 10:29:45 AM |
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Nice frame littlejohn, you're into some really old stuff down there. What's that middle point, the centerpiece? what a killer!
guess we were droolin at the same time.lol. 
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I breed scarlet and gray Posts: 1352
fairfield county,ohio
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Reply To This Topic #61 Posted Jan 12, 2010, 10:58:34 AM |
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thx for the link to the post lj,i joined a month after that.after reading that thread and looking in a couple books i would be inclined to type it as a diamond regardless of what the "experts" think.lol,but then again i dont know the types from that area other than what i have read.great find, too bad you didnt find anymore in that sandpit.so what did you end up typing it as?thx for sharing the pics 
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I breed scarlet and gray Posts: 1352
fairfield county,ohio
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Reply To This Topic #62 Posted Jan 12, 2010, 11:04:43 AM |
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HEY lj,just looked at those other post,killer stuff dude.that boatstone is killer and i really dig the guns.its alright you dont spell so good,you dont have to when you are finding relics like that!thx for the show 
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Reply To This Topic #63 Posted Jan 12, 2010, 11:11:34 AM |
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Thanks for linking up those older posts littlejohn. That pistol and boatstone are incredible, two of the nicest finds I've seen here, banner finds for sure.
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Posts: 211
Detector used: GTI 2500
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Reply To This Topic #64 Posted Jan 12, 2010, 12:08:25 PM |
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I have some shaped like that. My dad picked them up in Algeria. I always thought they were some kind of arrow point.
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I breed scarlet and gray Posts: 1352
fairfield county,ohio
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Reply To This Topic #65 Posted Jan 12, 2010, 12:25:33 PM |
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i though it was a ceremonial bat wing gary, but Neanderthal ,said it was a Caddoan knife,which he said is a type of gary i came to learn he is a very very smart man.and i have to belive what he said .as i know he knows tons more than me. if it was a peisker diamond, it be out of area,and mostly the best ever seen. i sent it in many years ago,to get it paper. the man sent it back,and would not paper it he said , its a florida point.and i could not have found it in texas but it was, found in texas. there was 4 people dugging when it was found. so i really just don't know,i know there been a lot of people who wants to buy it. it want be sold as long as i am alive
hmmmmm.........matt is a smart fella and knows his artifacts.i have never seen a caddoan knife that had shoulders and a stem??i could very well be wrong.have you lj?I dont buy into the thinking that types didnt travel out of their so called "distribution range"it is what it is and doesnt matter where the heck you found it,it is an exact match for a peisker diamond point imo,but it is disqualified because it was found in texas?no biggie i guess,its a killer relic regardless what anyone wants to call it 
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Posts: 4045
South East Tennessee
Detector used: Tesoro
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Reply To This Topic #66 Posted Jan 12, 2010, 06:13:05 PM |
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This has been a great post. Have enjoyed seeing so many nice artifacts. 
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Reply To This Topic #67 Posted Jan 12, 2010, 07:01:34 PM |
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Some more drills, first handful is personal finds, check out that oddball on the left, strange piece...never really seen anything like it. Second one I found last year, imo it was either a Kirk or Lost Lake. The last three found there way into my collection somehow, I dont have any info on them.
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Posts: 76
Shenandoah Valley, Virginia
Detector used: Eagle ll
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Reply To This Topic #68 Posted Jan 12, 2010, 07:31:19 PM |
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Great posts, all of them! This is the closest thing i have to a drill, maybe thirty7 will give me half credit for this one. 
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Reply To This Topic #69 Posted Jan 12, 2010, 07:36:40 PM |
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Nice, great drill man...it's pretty similar in form and material to my second piece I posted this evening. Va. find?
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Posts: 76
Shenandoah Valley, Virginia
Detector used: Eagle ll
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Reply To This Topic #70 Posted Jan 12, 2010, 07:43:43 PM |
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Nice, great drill man...it's pretty similar in form and material to my second piece I posted this evening. Va. find?
Yes it was, found in the creek behind the house.
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Posts: 211
Detector used: GTI 2500
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Reply To This Topic #71 Posted Jan 12, 2010, 08:29:07 PM |
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Trying to get a decent picture of my Dad's finds in Algeria. My son mounted them in a case for a Boy Scout "show & Tell" and caulked the back to keep prying fingers out of the display. From half way around the world and look like they came from the same Wall Mart.
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