Hafting has evolved through the past and the idea can still be seen in the structure of modern day tools such as hammers, axes, and many other hand tools.
22.
Finds of spun, dyed, and knotted flax fibers among Cro-Magnon artifacts in Dzudzuana shows they made cords for hafting stone tools, weaving baskets, or sewing garments.
23.
"' Typometry "'in archaeology is the measurement and analysis of metric measurements including length, width, surface area, cutting planes, hafting axis and others.
24.
The invention of hafting by people more than hundreds of thousands of years ago has directly contributed to the health and lives of people in the past and also people in the future.
25.
Atlatl competitions are held at Chimney PointThe park hosts the annual Northeast Open Atlatl Championship and workshops on Native American techniques of atlatl and dart construction, flint knapping, hafting stone points, and cordage making.
26.
By 1988, 93 examples of these implements had been identified and it should be noted that all of these implements have shaftholes for hafting and there are no examples of picrite being used to produce axes.
27.
Archeologists tell us that around 7, 000 B . C ., primitive tool makers lashed a branch to the stone head _ this technique is known as hafting _ and created the ancestor to our modern hammer.
28.
Some 10 12, 000 years ago, Tasmania became isolated from the mainland, and some stone technologies failed to reach the Tasmanian people ( such as the hafting of stone tools and the use of the Boomerang ).
29.
Hafting et al . ( 2005 ) suggested that a place code is computed in the entorhinal cortex and fed into the hippocampus, which may make the associations between place and events that are needed for the formation of memories.
30.
In order to have the stone hafted onto a larger piece, like wood or bone, the ground stone may have at least two notches ground out of one side of the stone, making grooves for the hafting material to lie inside.