Found this Native American point today in Massachusetts at a site known to have had humans as early as 12,000 years ago, pretty much right when the glaciers receded, leaving grasslands that mastodons & mammoths grazed on. Humans hunted said megafauna in same area. Based on point shape/type, this was likely formed by a human 8,000-10,000 years ago. And it was tumbling in water and dirt for millennia, until 2 hours ago. #history #naturewalk #usa #artifact #newengland #paleo #nature #hobbies https://video.nostr.build/45d8ab64d3635147950d993c630ddae39f0348e5c13c1223d748866f7683e336.mp4
Discussion
It must feel amazing to hold in your hand something that was created by another human tens of thousands of years ago.
I’m now listening to this episode on Rogan and thoroughly enjoying it:
https://open.spotify.com/episode/5jVsWOz8sYZ09ZBbk1EtpQ?si=3xZJcGP8QiauDVbUz5FPAA
It is surreal. Such a direct human connection from holding it, but such fundamentally different experiences & worldviews held by the creator vs the finder millennia later. My mind goes in loops on this stuff…
Incredibly cool. Followed 🤙
Amazing how many of these are still out there waiting to be discovered.
Still blows my mind that there are surface finds out there. I only got into this stuff in the past year
Throughout a lot of the southeast you can still find all kinds of buried Civil War artifacts. Belt buckles, bullets, knives, coins, etc. They’re just sitting there in parks and back yards.
Picked up this spear or axe head on a hike in CT known to have tribes that used to live there. No idea the age but cool finding these things people have no idea what to look for. 
Awesome find!
But now I have anxiety that I wasn't aware what I held in hand and tossed it carelessly back into the water countless times 😬
At least some were skipping the surface...
dude, very cool… sweet find!