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#1 |
Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 97
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Hi Guys,Can you help me out with this one its 4ft longwith greenish stone.
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: Jan 2008
Posts: 1,429
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Hi Graeme
Its from New Guinea - the stone head would have been cemented to the shaft with "putty nut". Nice piece. Regards |
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#3 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Sint-Amandsberg (near Ghent, Belgium)
Posts: 830
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On the site of the Division of Antropology of the American Museum of Natural History (http://anthro.amnh.org/), I found some examples in the collection's database.
This type of club comes from New Britain and is called 'Palau'. |
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#4 |
Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 97
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Thanks Guys,Putty Nut you couldnt make it up.
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#5 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: What is still UK
Posts: 5,824
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You lucky lucky chap. Not just PNG but other Islands. I believe that the stone ball heads are often held to the haft by dried clay, Atuna nut putty is an extreamly resilient substance and would still be evident. When clay is dry it would hold for most purposes at the time, think of sun dried mud bricks.
Last edited by Tim Simmons; 23rd January 2010 at 09:22 PM. |
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#6 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: What is still UK
Posts: 5,824
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graeme you will find this interesting.
Piercing hole worked from both sdes. Held fast with barkcloth, easy to fall apart easy to replace. Probably why older ones like yours are always loose. Just get some tourist painted barkcloth and adapt? Pictures from 1936-7 {The Kukukuku of the Upper Watut, Beatrice Blackwood}. Sorry for such huge pictures but not much point in showing otherwise. |
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