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Old 2nd February 2023, 08:43 PM   #1
drac2k
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Default 3 PNG Weapons & a possible 4th?

I was lucky enough to acquire these weapons recently. One is a Mendi Fighting Axe(these were banned in PNG in 1968), The maces I believe are from the Kamoro group or the Eastern Highlands based on the least common method of securing the star mace head to the shaft. The stone axe is a mystery to me and I can not find anything similar. The heavy, relatively sharp axe head with a medial ridge is securely fastened to a stout 31" shaft which appears to be coated with some type of pitch, etc. and one can see where the covering is cracked. It is a formidable weapon.
Any help in its identification would be helpful.
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Old 3rd February 2023, 01:56 AM   #2
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I think the stone ax is more of a tool than a weapon. I wish I had more information.
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Old 3rd February 2023, 02:19 AM   #3
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Stone axes have been superseded by steel axes and machetes since major contacts in the 1930s. Stone axes were continued to be produced in certain areas since and continued use as gifts including wedding payments.

There is a good book on stone axe making & use and I'll try to locate the reference. Or shall I say, "There is no "try". Either "do" or "not do".

Ed

Not the book, but a good recent article:
https://news.pngfacts.com/2020/02/th...t%20the%20time.

Last edited by Edster; 3rd February 2023 at 02:23 AM. Reason: Added article.
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Old 3rd February 2023, 02:34 AM   #4
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Here's the stone axe article. Not a book, but informative none the less.
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Old 3rd February 2023, 04:20 AM   #5
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Edster View Post
Here's the stone axe article. Not a book, but informative none the less.
Thanks Ed, very interesting so far. I ground a crude one out once. A very time-consuming process. I never mounted it or tried to use it. It takes a lot of patience to use one if you are used to steel.
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Old 3rd February 2023, 05:47 AM   #6
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Thanks to both of you for the comments and the information. It could be a tool, but I thought it was more of a weapon because of the substantial medial ridge on either side that would make it counterproductive to slicing like an ax. It certainly could be a ceremonial piece.
The spike on the backside makes reminds me more of a war hammer.
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