- Collection type
- Object
- Description
- Stone tool. [MJD 08/05/2013]
- Long description
- Stone tool. The stone is mid grey in colour and the surfaces are covered with a mid brownish orange patina. The dorsal surface is covered with 40% cortex. [MJD 08/05/2013]
- Geographical reference
- England Bedfordshire Bedford possibly Biddenham
- Person
- Maker Unknown Maker
- Field collector F.W. Knowles
- Field collector Francis Howe Seymour Knowles
- PRM source F.W. Knowles
- PRM source Francis Howe Seymour Knowles
- Date / Period
- Archaeological period: Palaeolithic
- Date collected
- Before 1904
- Acquisition information
- Purchased: 1904
- Dimensions
- Length: max 117 mm, Width: max 67 mm
- Object numbers
- Accession number: 1904.49.45
- Research and responses
In all probability this is actually Francis Howe Seymour Knowles, in the Annual Report of 1905 it says: 'Mr F. W. Knowles, of Oriel College has continued his practical study of the flight of the boomerang.' but in the 1906 Annual Report of the museum it says: '... and Mr F. H. S. Knowles, who has continued his practical researches into the characteristics and capabilities of the boomerang and the spear-thrower.' This suggests to me that for some reason Balfour recorded his name inaccurately until 1906 when it was corrected. This would fit with the date of this entry [AP 15/03/2004] It cannot be his son Francis Gerald William Knowles because he was not born until 1915, see biographies file [AP 03/03/2005]
Note that a large number of items come from a gravel pit in Biddenham, near Bedford, that is a mile and a half from the centre of Bedford and may therefore be the same quarry [AP 28/07/2006]
According to http://www.irsociety.co.uk/Archives/17/Beds_1.htm the gravel pit at Biddenham was '... owned by S.W. Jarvis & Son, a firm of stone and monumental masons in Alexandra Road, Bedford.' [AP 28/07/2006]
F.H.S. Knowles carried out some analysis of his own collection from Biddenham and used the collection to furnish examples for his publication "Knowles, F.H.S. 1953. Stone-worker's progress: a study of stone implements in the Pitt Rivers Museum. Oxford:University Press" [CB 28/10/2009]
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