A Manual for Neanderthals


Price:
Sale price$18.69

Description

The story of humanity's earliest days on earth has come down to us chiefly in the tools and weapons early hominids shaped from flint. With these tools, they gained ascendancy over less dexterous beasts and began the slow conquest of their environment. Other records, including their very bones, have largely rotted away, but their tools of flint endure.

H. Mewhinney presents A Manual for Neanderthals as "a common-sense, down-to-earth study of how flint tools and weapons were made-or for that matter, can still be made by any descendant of Stone Age man."

The author first sets the scene with a delightful and informative disquisition on flintflaking and flint-flakers, and then explains clearly and concisely how he and earlier Neanderthals have made flint artifacts, illustrating each step with drawings and photographs.

Archeologists and anthropologists will discover in this book a modest but genuine contribution to their fields, while collectors of Indian relics and people who like to tinker with tools and master unusual skills will find it a surprisingly practical guide to an interesting and ancient art. With patience, and with A Manual for Neanderthals at your side, you too can learn to flake flint.



Author: H. Mewhinney
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Published: 01/01/1970
Pages: 134
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.47lbs
Size: 9.00h x 6.00w x 0.33d
ISBN13: 9780292741423
ISBN10: 0292741421
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | Archaeology
- Crafts & Hobbies | Folkcrafts

About the Author
H. Mewhinney (1904-1973) was a newspaper reporter and columnist who wrote the column "Meeting All Comers" for the Houston Post for many years.