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Carving a Bone Fishhook — Grinding & Scoring Technique
Mary

Criado por

Mary

23. March 2026

Carving a Bone Fishhook — Grinding & Scoring Technique

Master the technique of carving functional fishhooks from animal bone using flint tools and sandstone abrasives. Bone hooks have been found at archaeological sites dating back 23,000 years.

Intermediate
45-90 minutes

Instruções

1

Select Suitable Bone

Choose a dense, compact bone — the cannon bone (metapodial) of deer, the rib of a large animal, or the leg bone of a bird for small hooks. Avoid spongy bone from joint ends; it lacks the structural density needed for a strong hook point. The bone section should be at least 5cm long and solid through its cross-section. Fresh or recently dried bone carves more easily than old, brittle bone. If working with dried bone, soak it in water for several hours to restore some workability.

2

Score the Hook Outline

Using a flint burin (a pointed flake tool), score the outline of a hook shape into the flat surface of the bone. The hook needs four elements: a straight shank (2-3cm) for line attachment, a smooth bend, a point, and optionally a small barb near the point. Score deeply along both sides of the outline by drawing the burin repeatedly through the same groove — 20-30 passes per line. The deeper the score lines, the cleaner the break will be.

Step 2 - Image 1
3

Break Out the Blank

Once the score lines are deep enough (at least 1-2mm), carefully snap the hook blank free from the surrounding bone by applying gentle bending pressure. Work slowly — if the bone cracks across the hook shape, you must start over. Some makers prefer to score from both sides of a thin bone section so the blank pops free cleanly. The result is a rough hook blank that still needs significant shaping.

4

Grind and Shape

Grind the hook blank against a flat sandstone slab using water as a lubricant. Wet grinding produces a smoother finish and prevents bone dust from clogging the stone. Shape the bend into a smooth curve — any flat spot or sharp angle creates a weak point where the hook will snap under load. Thin the point down to a sharp tip using fine, controlled strokes. Grind a small groove or notch near the top of the shank for tying the fishing line. The finished hook should be smooth with no rough edges that could cut the line.

5

Test and Harden

Test the hook by pressing the point into a piece of leather or hide — it should penetrate easily. Test the strength by flexing the bend gently — a good hook has slight spring but does not snap. For additional hardness, some prehistoric fishers heated bone hooks briefly over embers (not direct flame) until they turned light brown. This drives out remaining moisture and cross-links the collagen, increasing stiffness. Do not overheat — bone turns black and becomes brittle if charred. A single bone section can yield 3-5 hooks of various sizes.

Materiais

  • Dense animal bone (deer cannon bone or similar) - 1 section, 5-8cm piece
  • Sandstone slab (for grinding) - 1 flat piece pieceReferência
    Ver
  • Water (for wet grinding) - small amount pieceReferência
    Ver

Ferramentas necessárias

  • Flint knife or sharp flake
  • Flint burin (pointed engraving tool)
  • Sandstone abraderReferência
    Ver

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