:confused:So what is it for. Cutting grass or cutting and knapping bones?:confused:
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Guys and gals......still not seeing it. Looks like a rock.
Hmmmmm. Bunny.......maybe.......
coconuts, grasses, bones....who cares. I want to know who these "experts" and "educated people" are that you were talking to.
I agree with Crash, its still just a rock to me. This thread did give me a few belly-aching laughs though. Love it.
erumkis, Give it up. You are not going to convince anyone that it is anything other then a rock. Your perseverance makes for good comedy but it is destroying your credibility.
try skipping it over water, if on the last skip it doesn't sink...it isn't a rock and we can start all over
Amen brothe....Amen!
Now dogs carry frog knives? Well, if everybody says so. "OK, Muttley ! Up against the wall, this is a strip search, take off that fur coat." I ain't having an Attack Trained Beagle armed sleeping by the door.
What info did the bug lady give you that helped narrow down the dates? Was it used to smash insects too? And what does a university spokesperson know about anthropology?
It doesn't look anything like volcanic glass. It looks more like a basalt. Neither of which would have been found in any of the areas that you are talking about the "Cherocavemen" using it. I've looking in several anthropology texts that I have access to and I have found absolutely no reference to anything called a "frog knife." I am thinking that either someone is pulling your leg or it is a super secret conspiracy to not let us know about the existence of the frog people.
All rocks are rocks when you use a rock any rock it is a tool. So rocks are rocks and rocks are tools. The rocks that are on the ground are just rocks. The rock in your hand is a tool.