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Porcellanite Axeheads: Neolithic Tools in Northern Ireland

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AncientCraftUK - Dr. James Dilley

AncientCraftUK - Dr. James Dilley

Күн бұрын

Join experimental archaeologist and flintknapper, Dr. James Dilley as he explores the coast of Northern Ireland in search of suitable prehistoric axehead materials!
The Neolithic spread across Europe from the fertile crescent all the way to Britain and Ireland thousands of years after it first emerged. Some of the classic features of the Neolithic ‘package’ included ground/polished stone tools which in NW Europe is dominated by axe heads. Some of the well-known axe materials include flint from SE England, Langdale Tuff, Micro-diorite from North Wales, Cornish Greenstone and dolerite from the Whin Sill. But these are all lithic types from Britain, what was used in Ireland? And did it get further afield? James explores some of the materials along the Antrim coast to find out how it fitted into the Neolithic of Britain and Ireland.
*Porcellanite in Northern Ireland can only be found on private land and requires relevant permissions to be obtained. For the purposes of this video James is therefore demonstrating the same processes our Neolithic ancestors would have gone through to flake, shape and polish Porcellanite by using a piece of Antrim flint.
Filmed Edited & Produced by Emma Jones of ELWJ Media - www.elwjmedia.co.uk
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Papers:
THE PREHISTORIC ARTEFACTS OF NORTHERN IRELAND Harry and June Welsh
The Prehistoric Burial Sites of Northern Ireland - Harry & June Welsh
Sheridan, J.A. 1986 Porcellanite Artefacts: A New Survey. Ulster Journal of Archaeology vol 49 p19-32

Waddell, J. (1993) The Irish Sea in Prehistory, The Journal of Irish Archaeology, Vol. 6, 29-40
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Journals:
Aimée Little, Annelou van Gijn, Tracy Collins, Gabriel Cooney, Ben Elliott, Bernard Gilhooly, Sophy Charlton, Graeme Warren. Stone Dead: Uncovering Early Mesolithic Mortuary Rites, Hermitage, Ireland. Cambridge Archaeological Journal, 2016; 1 DOI: 10.1017/S0959774316000536
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To find out more about my flintknapping and experimental archaeology visit my website or follow me on social media!
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Twitter: / ancientcraftuk
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Пікірлер: 82
@seaniepc4
@seaniepc4 Жыл бұрын
You might find this interesting , years ago while out walking my dogs I crossed over a newly cleaned out drain in boggy area. I noticed a greenish stone on top of the newly removed peat. I picked it up and put it in my pocket, It looked like it had shape to it. I got home checked the stone and even I could see it was an axe head, blunt at one end and wider and sharper at the business end. Brought it to the museum and they took it. I did get £50 as a kind of reward. Now they told me this green type stone was only mined in 3 places in Ireland , 2 small ancient mines around Norther Ireland and one old mine in around Kilkenny I found it in Tipperary, They were very interested in the fact that a beautiful polished axe head made its way to mid Tipp' they told me it was a sign of bartering and trading. Axe head was just over 4 inchs long , wide at one end, smoothed down to a fine edge , it then tapered back to a kind of egg shaped knob. I was also informed it was between 4,000 and 6,000 years old. ps not marble , it was a rare yet very hard stone. I have lost the info on it sadly. OK hope it helps, its in Dublin Museum. Thank you ...
@JesseP.Watson
@JesseP.Watson 5 ай бұрын
That's made me chuckle... I visited Tievbulia (?) a couple of years ago and wandered all over that outcrop looking for the "axe factory" pin pointed on Google maps, I actually made a video with that making part of it... I scoured all the pits and found nought but sandstone and so decided it was a misplaced marker... Now I see it wasn't a pit I was searching for, it was the whole ridge. 😂 Well, you live and learn!
@troyclayton
@troyclayton Жыл бұрын
I'm so glad this video came up. This is the type of content I love.
@vapormissile
@vapormissile Жыл бұрын
Amen.
@mpccenturion
@mpccenturion Жыл бұрын
Cheers from Canada. Been 190 yrs since we left the area. Our best flint area is Saint John, New Brunswick harbor - where there is a lot of abandoned flint off the ships ballast. Thank you for your work!
@me_caveman2540
@me_caveman2540 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for visiting Northern Ireland ^^
@sstvost9
@sstvost9 5 ай бұрын
Really enjoyed this! Very informative and engaging.
@ThePrehistoryGuys
@ThePrehistoryGuys Жыл бұрын
Great stuff! Congrats to you and Em. Rupert and I will have to up our game ... 😊
@ancientcraftUK
@ancientcraftUK Жыл бұрын
Just wait till next week! 😉
@georgepretnick4460
@georgepretnick4460 Жыл бұрын
Thank you Dr. Dilley. Although I'm a Paleolithic enthusiast, I learned a lot from this video. I'd like to know more about sea travel from Scotland to Ireland and back during this era. Their seacrafts had to be bigger than a canoe or coracle.
@uncletiggermclaren7592
@uncletiggermclaren7592 Жыл бұрын
Well, I don't see why they had to be bigger. There are two Waka ( outrigger canoes ) In Auckland's Maritime Museum collection that were KNOWN to have repeatedly conducted round-trip sea voyages in the open ocean. One of them was recorded often by British Navy Warships as it was on its voyage from Opua, North Island New Zealand to the Cook Islands, a one way voyage of more than 3000 miles. That Waka was on the wall in the Auckland war memorial museum my whole childhood. She is 14 feet long, and the main hull is less than 3 feet across. The old Maori bloke who owned her and sailed her in the 1850s was famous for being intrepid, and discontent with land-life, and the British Navy Commanders loved to encounter him and they actually KNEW when and where to expect him as he was following traditional times and paths that are recorded in song, and many times the British wrote in their logs about his astonishing ability to navigate. He used to take the Cook Islanders our Kumara ( New Zealand sweet potato, the kind that grew up in the Cooks was different, and the locals there liked the different taste of the Kumara from here) , and bring back Coconuts. When he finally gave it up, one of the early Colonists brought and preserved his canoe as a wonder. The Waka Rakeitonga from Tikopia is half again as long, but only a foot wider of the main hull, and She was the trading vessel from Port Vila to Tikopia for 25 years.
@philmckenna5709
@philmckenna5709 Жыл бұрын
Orlando Bloom HASN'T let himself go...!
@paulmoore3878
@paulmoore3878 Жыл бұрын
I wish I had known you were here. I spend a lot of time at tievebulliagh, white park bay and the white rocks caves at Portrush knapping and studying the stone and flint. I am also running prehistoric experiences at mountsandel.
@ancientcraftUK
@ancientcraftUK Жыл бұрын
I’m sure we’ll be back!
@paulmoore3878
@paulmoore3878 Жыл бұрын
@@ancientcraftUK let me know when you are and I will give you a tour of other places. Have you ever worked with ryolite? Beside me is is a forest called tardree it’s in tardree mountain which is ryolite, basalt and dolomite.
@ancientcraftUK
@ancientcraftUK Жыл бұрын
I haven’t! Will definitely let you know
@paulmoore3878
@paulmoore3878 Жыл бұрын
@@ancientcraftUK you mentioned that the meso ancestors hunted deer which has always been a curiosity of mine as my findings are the deer died out at around 10600 bce and only wild boar were still indiginous to ireland at 9800 bce when our meso ancestors arrived. The current wild herds were introduced many thousands of years after this. This poses the questions around meso clothing and soft hammers for knapping. Have you any info or thoughts on his?
@ome69
@ome69 Жыл бұрын
I'd like to find out more about your work Paul in the prehistoic experiences and knapping, do you have any website or info? I'm in Portrush alot and live in B'money I was studying Archeaology at Queens but had to leave over health problems.
@mr.zardoz3344
@mr.zardoz3344 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating!
@robryan9841
@robryan9841 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating thank you 👍
@raymondwolken7975
@raymondwolken7975 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing
@tbirtchnell
@tbirtchnell Жыл бұрын
Amazing quality and commitment. You should have your own documentary on the BBC - I’d watch it!
@treasurehuntingscotlandmud9340
@treasurehuntingscotlandmud9340 Жыл бұрын
enjoyed the video
@ashleysmith3106
@ashleysmith3106 Жыл бұрын
Interestingly, in Australia, the Palaeolithic Age lasted in places to less than a century ago. As a prospector in my youth I saw thousands of Knapping sites, and found many, many artefacts in the central deserts. I'm sure archaeologists from the Northern Hemisphere would find much to interest them here.
@DD-kc5pw
@DD-kc5pw Жыл бұрын
Can’t wait to watch this!
@polderfischer8565
@polderfischer8565 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for that interesting contend!
@barrybrownless4704
@barrybrownless4704 Жыл бұрын
I'm so glad I came across this. I collect flint tools nothing as lovely as these, very interesting! Found a black flint adze once ( my best find)👍👍👍👍👍👍
@janetmackinnon3411
@janetmackinnon3411 Жыл бұрын
Most interesting. Thank you all for your work.
@claudiaschenk2982
@claudiaschenk2982 Жыл бұрын
Excellent presentations. ALWAYS!!
@pc9411
@pc9411 10 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@k1j2f30
@k1j2f30 Жыл бұрын
The por-cell-anite I am familiar with In Montana, USA, is like a unfired porcelain dish, a bathroom sink or a toilet. It is usually light grey, purple or ( rarely) red. It is not like the very close grain chert or flint-like material you show in this video that appears waxy, and resembles the fine chert-like, translucent material that we find in North Dakota, called Knife River Flint. Our porcellanite is formed when coal seams in the ground started burning from lighting strikes thousands, or millions of years ago, baking the clay in the soil to a porcelain like material that we now call porcellanite! It is easy to knap, and makes beautiful projectile points similar to obsidian, they were made and used mostly by archaic peoples in this area, but it is not as hard or durable material as a good quality chert. It does flake to a keen edge, but is more of a one time use projectile point, that dulls easily! I do not see how the basalt lava metamorphized with any material, even under high pressure, that resembles a porcelain material like the porcellanite you describe. Perhaps we are talking about two different materials, with the same name? Thank you for your videos, they are always enjoyed!
@ancientcraftUK
@ancientcraftUK Жыл бұрын
From our research the term porcellanite seems to cover a broad range of rock types that have a similar appearance rather than formation, which makes things confusing. The amount of geological research into Irish porcellanite is also rather limited sadly. The geology in Northern Ireland is quite striking as you see dark basalt overlaying white chalk with flint, really not what we're used to!
@spark5012
@spark5012 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, those rocks didn't look anything like porcelain. These tools don't seem to have sharp edges. I'd like to see them try to cut something.
@viktorstone7043
@viktorstone7043 Жыл бұрын
Was looking for this comment. I'm also from Montana...
@paulmoore3878
@paulmoore3878 Жыл бұрын
@@ancientcraftUK one of the reasons that pretty much all flint in Ireland is in north east. The harder volcanic basalt capped the limestone and chalk preventing mass erosion. 👍
@rodrigoboixo2642
@rodrigoboixo2642 Жыл бұрын
Great video and very interesting topic. Will there be a video on how these axes and other tools were used for woodworking?
@alaskabarb8089
@alaskabarb8089 9 ай бұрын
Wow, that clear axe (?) head at 9:18 was gorgeous.
@jdtheone
@jdtheone Жыл бұрын
Now this is what catches my interest so much more interesting then the endless cat videos on KZfaq
@liamredmill9134
@liamredmill9134 Жыл бұрын
You can add my collection of agatized flint from the Thames valley,I'm the biggest collector and peeper,but your series would have to relate to fossil's,as most of the polished blades of agatized flint I have made ,are just that transparent fossil's in flint
@unnaturalselection8330
@unnaturalselection8330 Жыл бұрын
Crazy. I have an ax head I was given by an uncle years ago that is smooth with a blade just like these black ones, only it's a greenish stone and has two grooves in it, one assumes for binding to a handle. Thing is, this was explained when given to me as a Cherokee tomahawk head. Says a lot about the way the human mind works that two groups of people separated by an ocean produced objects so similar in form and presumably use.
@fadeintoyou5341
@fadeintoyou5341 Жыл бұрын
This was amazing. I hope we get to see more. Maybe even a recreated porcellanite axe put to the test? They're beautiful
@unnaturalselection8330
@unnaturalselection8330 Жыл бұрын
Primitive Technology makes something rather similar and uses it harvest trees to build a hut FYI. Agreed, it is amazing.
@fadeintoyou5341
@fadeintoyou5341 Жыл бұрын
@@unnaturalselection8330 yeah I am aware. But THESE axes are something else. And to see one put to use crafted by an expert in the field would be awesome
@elisaunderlin9624
@elisaunderlin9624 Жыл бұрын
I hope you do a part 2 to this.
@me_caveman2540
@me_caveman2540 Жыл бұрын
As a local I look forward to this.
@vapormissile
@vapormissile Жыл бұрын
I worked on a dig on a Paleolithic chert quarry in Montana. Montana State University. Thanks for the work, subscribed.
@k1j2f30
@k1j2f30 Жыл бұрын
Was that the "Smith Chert Quarry," in western MT?
@vapormissile
@vapormissile Жыл бұрын
@@k1j2f30 I'm not sure, probably. The site was just a big pit with some side alcoves, maybe 50 feet across & 15 feet deep. It was a long time ago. It was near a cement plant on a big hill overlooking a river, way out in the middle of noplace.
@k1j2f30
@k1j2f30 Жыл бұрын
@@vapormissile Thanks for the reply, sounds like, close to Three Forks, maybe.
@rosewhite---
@rosewhite--- Жыл бұрын
Flints are actually baked jellyfish impressions that became filled with silica, chert and quartz precipitated out of the great geysers of The Flood.
@lesleeg9481
@lesleeg9481 Жыл бұрын
Who made your leather clothing for the video? It's very well done as far as I can see, and makes the history come alive in a vivid way. Love this stuff even though I don't do flint knapping.
@bigred8438
@bigred8438 Жыл бұрын
On the south coast of Australia some beaches are strewn with rounded boulders of handable size which are white on the outside but almost black on the inside. Would these be chert
@moemuggy4971
@moemuggy4971 27 күн бұрын
All these celt axes appear all across America during roughly the same time period. There's zero chance there wasn't communication and trade between the two continents.
@simonphoenix3789
@simonphoenix3789 10 ай бұрын
I don't understand why they even made those polished axes out of flint. if they knew how to knap them, why go through the massive effort of polishing them? once its polished, the edge will never be as sharp as a knapped axe, and you can't quickly correct a dulled edge on a polished axe short of spending a lot of time abrading it again. With a knapped edge, an antler tine or a billet and you can fix it up quickly.
@ianbruce6515
@ianbruce6515 Жыл бұрын
As a builder of wooden boats, of all sorts including replicas, (nothing before 1500), and having a huge interest in Maritime archeology --I would really like to know something about the vessels that transported people and products across the Irish sea, back then. Are there any depictions?
@ancientcraftUK
@ancientcraftUK Жыл бұрын
Logs boats are the earliest known craft in NW Europe prior to the mid Bronze Age. After this we start to get plank & sewn craft such as the Dover boat or Ferriby boats. They’re amazing bits of carpentry!
@ianbruce6515
@ianbruce6515 Жыл бұрын
@@ancientcraftUK I wish there were more surviving examples. I have never seen mention of a transitional type, as such as were still in use in parts of the Caribbean, forty years ago-- essentially a log with a stem and sternpost mortised into the log a foot or two in from the ends, the log shaped to be the bottom of the boat and a couple of planks added up from there. The ram like bow makes hard landings on rough beaches safer and may be an ancestor of the weaponised ram. I can see a craft like this in the Irish sea. Maybe single log dugouts--but that takes a very large log. Dunno. So fascinated and curious!
@avalonindependent3400
@avalonindependent3400 Жыл бұрын
I found a really amazing hand axe whilst visiting a marble mine in Connemara, is there any way to “Date’ it please? It’s been kind of ‘knapped’ and shaped.
@StutleyConstable
@StutleyConstable Жыл бұрын
Very interesting overall. I was not aware of porcellanite until watching this. What kind of stone was/is used to polish the tools? Presumably, it is about as hard as the stone of the tools.
@paulmoore3878
@paulmoore3878 Жыл бұрын
It would have been quarried and then roughed out at teivebulliagh but then moved to the coast to be flaked and ground using the sandstone and quartzite. Lots of flakes and chips can still be found at tievebulliagh. Flaking Porcellanite is more difficult than flint but it’s possible and it creates a very good edge when ground.
@stevesyncox9893
@stevesyncox9893 Жыл бұрын
The polishing stone needs to be harder than the polished stone.
@davidperry5631
@davidperry5631 Жыл бұрын
I don’t think they knapped barefoot,it doesn’t work for me. I was wondering if they tried heat treatment on this flint?and does it change color when treated.thanks for sharing this great video.
@robertodebeers2551
@robertodebeers2551 Жыл бұрын
The Aztecs left them there. Which worked so much better than trying to cut down trees with potato axes that the Irish used.
@Sheepdog1314
@Sheepdog1314 Жыл бұрын
could you use porcellanite from other sources, like Poland or Czechoclovakia?
@ancientcraftUK
@ancientcraftUK Жыл бұрын
In theory yes!
@Wicknews8100
@Wicknews8100 Жыл бұрын
I have some animal effigies and stone tools from southern Ontario if anyone's interested
@cestmoi7368
@cestmoi7368 Жыл бұрын
Neolithic people were responsible for deforestation?? Not sure I heard that correctly…
@paulmoore3878
@paulmoore3878 Жыл бұрын
That is correct. When farming arrived forests were cut down. Throughout the centuries though more de forestation took place to create housing , ship building etc. the forests were replaced with fast growing species like spruce as the forestry service was invented to make money. Lots of our Broad leaf forests were destroyed to make way for money making by the British government.
@dreadrabbit
@dreadrabbit Жыл бұрын
Bit of a cliché that only the rich could possess "X". I'm a blue collar and have never in my life seen a rich man swing a tool. Plus doubt it was the upper class that cleared those forests.
@LSOP-
@LSOP- Жыл бұрын
Hype
@rosewhite---
@rosewhite--- Жыл бұрын
There was no 10,000 years ago. The Ice Age came after The Flood of 4,370 years ago when all the water was evaporating and making thick clouds that blocked the sun and made lots of snow and rain to fall on the poles and mountains.
@ccampbell7214
@ccampbell7214 Жыл бұрын
🤔 huh?!..... Last time I was in Ireland traveling and sightseeing... There's one common aspect of almost every place you go out there... The lack of trees... Almost everywhere they have cut down all their trees... Except for the patches that the government regulates... I can't see that anybody living in Ireland would have much use for an ax in there quiver of tools.. So if I'm to believe that these are amazing axes that are coming out of Ireland.. I believe I'm calling BS.... For obvious reasons.. that I shouldn't have to point out... But when all hell breaks loose not a bad thing to have as a weapon... After all the bullets are depleted...
@leslielane2534
@leslielane2534 Жыл бұрын
oh thousands of years ago, during the neolithic age, most likely there were trees....
@denysbeecher5629
@denysbeecher5629 Жыл бұрын
I too would have been very concerned in 4,000 BC with what I was going to do when all the bullets were depleted...
@westho7314
@westho7314 Жыл бұрын
Axes were produced when Ireland was heavily forested, same as Britain & forested northern latitudes & plenty more found in North America, These also work well as hoes and planting/digging tools for roots. When bullets are depleted we'll all be pretty much finished & full of holes, with 350 million guns alone in private hands in the US, not to speak of military & police arsenals and all the peppers & end timer militias plus the paranoid Cristo fascist religious sects with their huge hordes of unregistered guns & bulks of ammunition. Average Joe public in the US has... say 100 -500+ rounds of ammo per gun kept on hand, that number times 350 million- do the math, you won't need a hand axe, spear, atlatl, sling.or bow /arrow. Maybe a sailboat if you know how to sail, and know navigation & location of some remote uninhabited island , there the hand axe or two will come in very handy indeed for splitting coconuts.
@westho7314
@westho7314 Жыл бұрын
@@leslielane2534 They say upon European contact, a squirrel in Maine could travel tree to tree all the way to the Mississippi River without ever touching the ground.
@cgillespie8010
@cgillespie8010 Жыл бұрын
Is this a troll? You went to Ireland, realised there was few trees and so somehow it would have been the same over 6000 years ago? Also your on the internet - ‘the Irish will never be tamed while the leaves are on the trees'. (Queen) Elizabeth expressly orders the destruction of all woods in Ireland to deprive the Irish insurgents of shelter. There was also a successful attempt to destroy the wolf population, also it was the age of ship building and a lot of wood after that period went into ship building.
@drcurioustube
@drcurioustube Жыл бұрын
A bit more content please. Get that camera going.
@elwjphotography6588
@elwjphotography6588 Жыл бұрын
If KZfaq paid the bills, we probably could afford to get that camera going a bit more 😉
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