For example, both Native Americans and Europeans used awls to produce clothing, bags, and leggings. |
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Of these artifacts, the material best suited for radiometric dating was a set of bone awls. |
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An abundance of bone awls suggests the importance of skin and leather working. |
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Bone and antler were used to make dress-pins, hair combs, toggles, needle-cases, handles for iron knives, awls and other domestic equipment. |
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A groove down one side of the triangle makes short work of sharpening fish hooks, awls, etc. |
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One twelve-year-old was buried with a range of grave goods including a stone biface, bone awls, a shark's tooth, and barbed bone points. |
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It's a veritable hardware store of saw blades, pickaxe blades, trowels and awls. |
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They would also have used tools such as planes, axes, adzes, draw knives, wedges, knives, chisels, hammers, mallets, awls, gouges, and spoon augers. |
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Stone tools of the tradition include triangular points made on flakes, racloirs, triangular bifacial handaxes, and burins and awls made on blades. |
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Prismatic blades were used for cutting and scraping, and have been reshaped into other tool types, such as projectile points and awls. |
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She uses ice picks to poke holes in the lids, because the book binder awls she once worked with were stolen. |
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The preceding period is known as the Copper Age and is characterised by the production of flat axes, daggers, halberds and awls in copper. |
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It contained tools such as choppers, burins, and stitching awls. |
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At Blombos Cave several bone tools, including awls and bone points, have been recovered from both the Later Stone Age and Middle Stone Age sequence. |
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