Thursday, January 19, 2012

A History of the World in 100 Objects: Clovis Spear Point

Monday, January 16th's object was the Clovis Spear Point.


© Trustees of the British Museum

To listen to the entire show, click here.

 The spear head and others like it are called Clovis points and are the first evidence of human activity in North America. The period of the people who used the Clovis spear aligns with the extinction of mammoths, giant sloth, camels and giant bison in North America. The extinction of these animals is a combination of climate change and human hunters.

The arrow head is about 13,000 years old and was found in Arizona

© Trustees of the British Museum

North America was one of the last continents in the world to be settled by humans. During the last Ice Age, there was a land bridge between Siberia and Alaska which allowed the crossing into North America. The Clovis spear points can be found throughout North America.

 Even though the spears were used to hunt large game, the spear point is rather small.

© Trustees of the British Museum

Gary Haynes, Archaeologist, Univeristy of Nevada, wrote:

I suppose everybody that ever finds a Clovis Point is deeply moved by the act of discovering something that’s 13,000 years-old. You can almost detect a ghost that had made it.

The people who made these points were new to the Americas, they were people on the move – explorers – and I can really feel quite a bit of empathy with what it must have been like to enter a country that nobody had told you about – that no-one had actually been in before you, and to try to figure out where you want to go next, how you stay in touch with your relatives and friends. These things are markers of their identity, as much as being very functional. They’re very sharp, they’re very well made, they’re extremely well engineered – maybe over-engineered – they’re made better than they probably had to be.

I worked as a graduate student back in the 1970s in Virginia at a site called the Thunderbird site on the banks of the Shenandoah River, and that was a place where people were making these Clovis points or Clovis type points, and sometimes they’d fail, they’d break one – they’d drop it or discard it. Sometimes there’d be piles and piles of flakes from when they were reducing a rock into these nice sharp spear points.

Being there at the time of discovery and finding these little bits and pieces that could be put back together to sort of ‘discover’ the process people had gone through in making them inspired me to learn how to make them myself, which I tried to do, and it takes a while. It isn’t something that comes as easy as you might hope it would and every time I find one now I still sort of relive that thrill; the idea that this is something wonderful – this is something from the past and it isn’t easy to make, and very few people probably could do it.

I have an image, it’s a very romanticized, I suppose, image. It’s impossible for me not to think of these people as all very young. I mean that’s just the way it seems to be with Stone Age people that they don’t live very long lives, and it has even been suggested that many of these Clovis points were made by teenagers – young men or women on the move, old enough to reproduce, old enough to explore and very switched on as hunter-gatherers.

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-VB