Page:The Ancient Stone Implements (1897).djvu/426

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JAVELIN AND ARROW HEADS.
[CHAP. XVI.

schmit[1] engraves specimens, like Figs. 311 and 327, from the Rhine and Oldenburg, and a tanged arrow-head of serpentine from Inzighofen, near Sigmaringen, on the Danube.[2] Lisch also engraves a few specimens from North Germany,[3] which resemble the Scandinavian in character. Near Egenburg,[4] in Lower Austria, a considerable number have been found. Some Austrian[5] arrow-heads are barbed, but without the central tang.

Considering the wonderful abundance of flint implements in Denmark and Southern Sweden, it is not a little singular that arrow-heads should be there comparatively so rare. The leaf-shaped form is extremely scarce, but a triangular form, resembling the leaf-shaped in all respects but in having a rounded notch at the base in lieu of a rounded end, is more common. Stemmed and barbed arrow-heads are also very scarce, and those merely tanged are usually flakes simply trimmed at the edges, with the exception of those of equilateral triangular section, which are peculiar to Scandinavia. The lozenge-shape appears to be unknown; and by far the greater number of arrow-heads are of the triangular form, sometimes but slightly, if at all, hollowed at the base, though usually furnished with long projecting wings or barbs. The same type occurs in Norway.[6] Occasionally the notch between the barbs is square, and the ends of the barbs worked at an angle of about 45°, like Fig. 319, without the central stem. In some rare instances the barbs curve outwards at the points, giving an ogee form to the sides. In others the barbs curve inwards. In many, the sides are delicately serrated, and in most the workmanship is admirable. What appear to be lance-heads are sometimes notched on either side near the base, like the common North American form, and like those already mentioned as occurring occasionally in France.[7]

In Norway,[8] and more rarely in Sweden,[9] stemmed and acutely barbed arrow- and lance-heads, made of hard slate ground on the surface, are occasionally found. Knives of the same material also occur. They much resemble some of those from Greenland, and are probably of comparatively late date. Some spear-head-like implements of slate, ornamented with incised lines, have been found in a circular fort on Dunbuie Hill,[10] near Dumbarton.

Triangular arrow-heads of flint, more or less excavated at the base like those from Scandinavia, are also sometimes found in Russia. Specimens from Ekaterinoslav in the South, and Olonetz in the North, were exhibited at Paris in 1867. Others from Archangel approach more nearly to the North American form. They are occasionally tanged.[11]

  1. "Alterth. u. h. Vorzeit," vol. i. Heft vi. pl. i. "Hohenz. Samml.," Taf. xliii. 17.
  2. "Hohenz. Samml.," Taf. xliii. 25.
  3. "Frederico-Francisceum," 1837, Tab. xxvii.
  4. Von Sacken, "Grabfeld von Hallstatt," p. 38.
  5. Kenner, "Arch. Funde. i. d. Oesterr. Mon.," 1867, p. 41.
  6. O. Rygh, "Norske Oldsager," (1881), No. 76.
  7. Conf. Madsen's "Afbildninger," pl. xxxvii. and xxxix. Worsaae, "Nord. Oldsager," fig. 68 et seqq. Nilsson's "Stone Age," pl. iii. and v. Antiq. Tidskrift för Sverige, 1864, pl. xxiii.
  8. Foreningen til Norske Fortidsmindesmerkers Bevaring, Aarsber., 1867, pl. i.; 1868, pl. iii. 8.
  9. Nilsson, "Stone Age," pl. iii. 59.
  10. P. S. A. S., vol. xxx., 1896, p. 291.
  11. L'Anthropologie, vol. vi. (1895), p. 14.