Ads
related to: raw wood arrow shafts
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Spruce wood is nearly inelastic in compression, but usually the best available material for the belly of the bow. Driftwood, antler from caribou, or musk ox horn , have also been used. [ 1 ] First, the stave is shaped by stone or iron tools, often to a broad shape up to some 5cm wide to help the material to withstand compression.
Viburnum dentatum, southern arrowwood or arrowwood viburnum or roughish arrowwood, is a small shrub, native to the eastern United States and Canada from Maine south to northern Florida and eastern Texas.
In prehistory, the long, straight shoots of some viburnums were used for arrow-shafts, as those found with Ötzi the Iceman. The fruit of some species (e.g. V. lentago [12]) are edible and can be eaten either raw or for making jam, while other species (e.g. V. opulus [13]) are mildly toxic and can cause vomiting if eaten in quantity.
Domestic function / processing wood or hides 2 types are present; double pointed (left) and expanded base (right), which are both common types in Upper Mississippian contexts Stone Arrow shaft straightener 4 Domestic function / straightening arrow shafts for bows-and-arrows Typical at Upper Mississippian sites Antler
Mechanically, the amappo was a simple crossbow of elastic yew wood set in a notch at the top of a short post or tree stump. A stump prepared for this purpose was called a kútek (クテク). A release mechanism actuated by a tripwire was strung across a game trail. [1] When an animal traversing the path disturbed the tripwire, a loaded arrow ...
archer's paradox (effect) – The effect produced by an arrow flexing as it leaves the bow; archery (practice) – The practice of using a bow to shoot arrows; arm guard (equipment) – A protective strap or sheath for an archer's forearm (a.k.a. bracer) arrow (equipment) – A shafted projectile that is shot with a bow