အနုပညာ
အလှအပနှင့် ကျန်းမာရေး
လက်မှုအနုပညာ
ယဉ်ကျေးမှုနှင့် သမိုင်း
ဖျော်ဖြေရေး
ပတ်ဝန်းကျင်
အစားအစာနှင့် အချိုရည်
စိမ်းလန်းသောအနာဂတ်
ပြောင်းပြန်အင်ဂျင်နီယာပညာ
သိပ္ပံပညာများ
အားကစား
နည်းပညာ
ဝတ်ဆင်နိုင်သောပစ္စည်းများ
Hafting a Flint-Bladed Grain Sickle — Composite Harvesting Tool
Forge

Created by

Forge

23. March 2026

Hafting a Flint-Bladed Grain Sickle — Composite Harvesting Tool

Build a composite grain sickle by setting multiple small flint blades into a curved wooden or bone handle with bitumen adhesive. Flint-bladed sickles were the primary grain harvesting tool from the Natufian period (approximately 12,500 BCE) through the Bronze Age. The distinctive 'sickle sheen' (a high-gloss polish from cutting silica-rich grain stems) visible on archaeological flint blades is one of the key indicators of early agriculture.

Intermediate
2-3 hours

Instructions

1

Select and Shape the Handle

Choose a naturally curved piece of hardwood — the inner curve of a branch fork or a section of curved jawbone works well. The handle should curve like a shallow crescent, 30-40 cm along the outside edge. Carve a narrow groove (about 5 mm wide and 5-8 mm deep) along the inside edge of the curve. This groove will receive the flint blades. The groove must follow the curve consistently so that all blades present a uniform cutting edge. A mandible (jawbone) from a large animal such as a deer or cow provides a natural curved handle with a slot along the tooth socket that can serve as the blade groove.

2

Prepare the Flint Blades

Select or knap small, thin flint bladelets — each approximately 3-5 cm long, 1-2 cm wide, and 3-5 mm thick. The bladelets should have at least one sharp, straight edge that will serve as the cutting surface. For a sickle 30-40 cm long, you need 5-10 bladelets arranged end to end along the groove. Test-fit the blades in the groove before gluing — they should sit flush with the edge of the handle, with their sharp edges protruding 3-5 mm beyond the groove to form a continuous serrated cutting edge. A slightly serrated (saw-toothed) edge is actually more effective for cutting grain stems than a smooth edge.

Step 2 - Image 1
3

Set the Blades with Adhesive

Warm bitumen (natural asphalt, found as surface deposits in Mesopotamia) or pine pitch until it is soft and workable. Press a layer of warm adhesive into the groove, then press each blade into position, one after another. The adhesive fills the gap around each blade and locks it firmly in place when it cools and hardens. Bitumen was the preferred adhesive in the Near East because it is naturally waterproof and very strong — archaeological sickles with bitumen hafting remain intact after 8,000 years. If using pine pitch, mix it with crusite charcoal powder and beeswax to improve its adhesion and reduce brittleness.

4

Test and Adjust

Once the adhesive has fully hardened (allow several hours for bitumen, overnight for pine pitch), test the sickle by cutting a bundle of grass or grain stems. Grip the handle firmly and draw the blade edge across the stems in a sweeping, pulling motion. The serrated flint edge should slice cleanly through the stems. If any blades are loose, re-warm the adhesive and re-seat them. If the cutting angle is awkward, the curve of the handle can be adjusted by selecting a different natural curve. The sickle should feel balanced and comfortable for extended use, as grain harvest was intense, time-critical work lasting days or weeks.

5

Harvesting Technique and Sickle Sheen

To harvest grain, grasp a bundle of stems near the seed heads with one hand and cut through the stems 15-20 cm above the ground with the sickle. The serrated flint edge creates a sawing action that is more effective on fibrous stems than a smooth knife edge. After repeated use cutting silica-rich grain stems (wheat, barley, and emmer all have high silica content in their stems), the flint blades develop a distinctive high-gloss polish on the cutting edge called sickle sheen. This polish is caused by microscopic silica particles in the plant stems abrading and polishing the flint surface. Sickle sheen is visible to the naked eye as a bright, reflective band along the blade edge and is one of the most reliable archaeological indicators that a site practised agriculture.

Step 5 - Image 1

Materials

  • Curved wooden or bone handle - 1 piece, 30-40 cm long, naturally curved piece
  • Flint bladelets (small, thin flakes) - 5-10 pieces, 3-5 cm long piece
  • Bitumen or pine pitch (adhesive) - enough to fill the blade groove piecePlaceholder
    View

Tools Required

  • Flint knifePlaceholder
    View
  • Fire source (for warming adhesive)

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