• Probably something else the ID perps could be working on.

    From RonO@21:1/5 to All on Sat Sep 9 09:16:02 2023
    https://www.science.org/content/article/were-these-stone-balls-made-ancient-human-relatives-trying-perfect-sphere

    Spherical stones are found among ancient stone tool sets, but we don't
    know what they were used for. This news article claims that they were
    worked into shape by human hands. They think that chipping around the
    less round sections indicate work to round out the sphere. This is a scientific endeavor that the ID perps could be helping out if they were actually trying to do any ID science.

    My guess is that the edges that show chipping could indicate that these
    stones were roughly shaped and smoothed for hammer work on other stone
    tools. They were made of limestone so they wouldn't be expected to hold
    a useful edge, but they might have been used to work blade tech tools.
    They are a little smaller in diameter than a baseball, so they would fit
    easily into the palm of your hand, and the flat surfaces that show work chipping around the edges could be the working edges of this tool.

    It could be that they made them just for amusement, but they are the
    right size to easily fit into a human hand. Maybe there was an ancient
    game of 9 pins?

    There seems to be evidence that ancient Homo did make things for their
    esthetic value. Some of the huge stone hand axes seem to be too large
    and ornate to have been used to dig tubers. They might have been a
    symbol of the expertise of the makers, and used to demonstrate how good
    that individual was in working stone.

    We probably won't ever know for sure unless we have time travel.

    Ron Okimoto

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gary Hurd@21:1/5 to RonO on Sat Sep 9 10:53:05 2023
    On Saturday, September 9, 2023 at 7:20:31 AM UTC-7, RonO wrote:
    https://www.science.org/content/article/were-these-stone-balls-made-ancient-human-relatives-trying-perfect-sphere

    Spherical stones are found among ancient stone tool sets, but we don't
    know what they were used for. This news article claims that they were
    worked into shape by human hands. They think that chipping around the
    less round sections indicate work to round out the sphere. This is a scientific endeavor that the ID perps could be helping out if they were actually trying to do any ID science.

    My guess is that the edges that show chipping could indicate that these stones were roughly shaped and smoothed for hammer work on other stone tools. They were made of limestone so they wouldn't be expected to hold
    a useful edge, but they might have been used to work blade tech tools.
    They are a little smaller in diameter than a baseball, so they would fit easily into the palm of your hand, and the flat surfaces that show work chipping around the edges could be the working edges of this tool.

    It could be that they made them just for amusement, but they are the
    right size to easily fit into a human hand. Maybe there was an ancient
    game of 9 pins?

    There seems to be evidence that ancient Homo did make things for their esthetic value. Some of the huge stone hand axes seem to be too large
    and ornate to have been used to dig tubers. They might have been a
    symbol of the expertise of the makers, and used to demonstrate how good
    that individual was in working stone.

    We probably won't ever know for sure unless we have time travel.

    Ron Okimoto

    Hammer stones used for core reduction were rounded. We have a large ethnographic, and archaeological literature just here in California. I was surprised, and disappointed until I saw these "mysteries" were all reported on by Europeans.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Pro Plyd@21:1/5 to Gary Hurd on Sat Sep 9 20:36:41 2023
    Gary Hurd wrote:
    On Saturday, September 9, 2023 at 7:20:31 AM UTC-7, RonO wrote:
    https://www.science.org/content/article/were-these-stone-balls-made-ancient-human-relatives-trying-perfect-sphere

    Spherical stones are found among ancient stone tool sets, but we don't
    know what they were used for. This news article claims that they were
    ...
    It could be that they made them just for amusement, but they are the
    right size to easily fit into a human hand. Maybe there was an ancient
    game of 9 pins?
    ...

    Hammer stones used for core reduction were rounded. We have a large ethnographic, and archaeological literature just here in California. I was surprised, and disappointed until I saw these "mysteries" were all reported on by Europeans.


    He guessed right with "game of 9 pins"

    <https://static.wikia.nocookie.net/flinstones/images/c/c7/The_Flintstones_-_Bedrock_Bowling_Alley_from_The_Rock_Quarry_Story.jpg/revision/latest?cb=20211208081834>

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)