Plains bow replica in Osage Orange with a backing of buffalo sinew
This modern clovis point was hafted with traditional materials for North Carolina's Morrow Mountain Museum
Replica of Chippewa quiver in the correct canoe birch bark of the original.
Atlatlist Tom Frank preparing for a 75 yard distance target
A cast/replica of an Upper Paleolithic(around17,000 BP) spear thrower. The spur portion was made out of mammoth ivory, and was found at the French site of La Madeleine. The handle was not found attached, but shows how many of the handles were made at the time. It is believed that they were attached to wood handles where the drilled holes are.
This small knife is to be worn around the neck for small chores such as cutting chords. It is made in a rare green obsidian and the sheath is made of braintan smoked buckskin.
Grooved and hafted axe for the Morrow Mountain Museum in North Carolina
This modern atlatl weight was carved in Agate. It is in the style of the South and Central American cultures such as Incan, Aztec, and Mayan. These cultures used the atlatl for thousands of years, and in some cases continued to use it up into the time of European contact. This one of a kind piece was a great match in color and function to the Osage Orange atlatl it was attached to.