Tool them bones
Words do not describe how cool the show was, especially Rooster. The place exploded when Maynard came out. Im glad everyone was able to do their part, and that Alice In Chains got to get together again. I hope its not the last time. RIP Layne Staley, youll never be forgotten.
P Layne Staley. Seeing the boy's play was like an old addiction. It felt so good that night and as soon as it was over came the withdrawls. Layne staley left big shoes to fill, but i can think of noone better to fill them than maynard. Please check the sidebar to the right or the related band pages for recent related news articles.
Subscribe to our feed to get updates automatically or subscribe by email to receive a daily digest of heavy metal news. Metal Underground. Please share this article if you found it interesting. The fact that they are together once more is just awesome!!! Can we get a recording or a tape of this?? Hawkinz writes:. I Wish I Were Twins 6. I'm Crazy 'bout My Baby 7. Inside 8. Let's Sing Again 9. Lonesome Road Solitude Star Dust Take It Easy Tea for Two Truckin' Two Sleepy People Viper's Drag When Somebody Thinks You're Wonderful You're Laughing At Me You're Not the Kind Cheeeek that out dude.
Lead RIFFs:. Bad selection. Save Cancel. Really delete this comment? Tools for scraping and smoothing the inner surfaces of hides were made by breaking off the heads of a leg bone of a bison or other large mammal, exposing rough cancellous interior bone. Deer jaws were used in an unmodified state for threshing grasses. The front portion was frequently worked away and polished smooth. The ribs of bison and elk as well as the long bones of deer were sometimes drilled with holes for use in straightening arrow shafts.
When arrow shafts were heated, these wrenches helped remove warps or irregularities. Fishhooks were made by two methods depending on the bone used. Toe bones of deer were cut and split lengthwise. The exterior surface of the bone was then removed by grinding, leaving only the hook-shaped ridge of bone inside.
Larger fishhooks were made by grooving and grinding oval-shaped pieces of a split rib. Awls, used as leather punches in sewing hides, were made from a variety of bones. The ulnae of deer could be cut, and then ground and polished to form a sharp tip. Splinters of rib and long bone were also ground into awls.
Hollow bird bones also were sometimes broken and split to form awls. So-called quill flatteners are flat-ended tools made from long splinters of mammal bone. The rounded and flattened ends of these tools are thought to have been used in flattening porcupine quills for use as decoration. They may also have been used as pressure flakers in flintknapping or for smoothing in pottery making.
Like bone, antler is tough and resilient. Unlike bone, however, antler is relatively solid and varies greatly in form among individual deer. Antlers are grown by male deer and are shed each winter. Antlers were perhaps most important to prehistoric groups for use as flintknapping tools. Soft hammer batons for controlled percussion flaking were made from the basal portions of antlers by cutting them to length and grinding off the rough burr at the base.
Antler tips, cut to lengths of 3 to 10 inches, were used as pressure flakers. Antler tips were sometimes cut and drilled to make conical arrow points. Skip to main content.
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