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Teaching Complex Flint Knapping Strategies in the Classroom Using "Potato Knapping"

  • Autores: Chris Clarkson
  • Localización: Lithic technology, ISSN 0197-7261, Vol. 42, Nº. 4, 2017, págs. 155-160
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • Stone suitable for flint knapping is fine-grained and isotropic, sharp, and characteristically prone to production failures in the hands of novicesThis poses significant problems for university teachers trying to instruct novices in the fundamentals of stone working in limited time during classroom practicals where health and safety concerns must be taken seriously. In this paper I outline a cheap and successful approach to teaching knapping using potatoes—“potato knapping”—adopted in several of my courses. This approach allows undergraduates to acquire working knowledge of complex reduction sequences with low risk of self-injury and without the need for any prior skill or training in knapping. This technique is employed successfully to teach complex tasks, such as Levallois flaking, in short practicals, as well as to test various hypotheses and illustrate important concepts in classroom settings. Potato knapping as a research medium also has much potential to answer fundamental anthropological questions, as illustrated by a case study in cultural transmission.


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