South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Ohio teens uncover ax that’s 6,000 years old

- By Michael E. Ruane The Washington Post

Two high school seniors found the stone ax Oct. 12.

About 6,000 years ago, a precious stone ax that had been skillfully carved and shaped by Native Americans was lost on a ridge over looking the Potomac River in Virginia. The ax, about seven inches long, had been hewed and smoothed and was narrowed at one end where a wooden handle attached. Its loss must have been keenly felt.

Six millennia later, on Oct. 12, 2018, Dominic Anderson and Jared Phillips, 17-year-old high school seniors from Ohio, were on an archaeolog­ical dig at George Washington’s estate at Mount Vernon, when a stone that looked like a big potato turned up in their sifting screen. Not sure what it was, they asked the Mount Vernon archaeolog­ists working nearby.

It was the lost ax, missing for 60 centuries.

Officials at Mount Vernon, who announced details of the find last week, said it was a major discovery that helps take the story of the site far beyond its place as the home of the first president of what would become the United States.

It “provides a window onto the lives of individual­s who lived here nearly 6,000 years ago,” said Sean Devlin, Mount Vernon’s curator of archaeolog­ical collection­s. “Artifacts such as this are a vital resource for helping us learn about the diverse communitie­s who shaped this landscape throughout its long history.”

Mount Vernon officials said the ax had been made from a piece of “green stone” probably taken from a local river.

It had been chipped with a hammer stone to create a cutting edge and then further carved with a harder stone to create a smoother cutting surface. It was then worked even further with a grinding stone, and the groove was cut where the handle would attach. The tool was probably valuable.

Devlin said the ax was dated through knowledge of when such tools came into use, by comparing it to other tools from the period, and by dating the methods of its constructi­on. It is believed to be the first such artifact found at Mount Vernon in recent years.

The makers of the ax were probably people who migrated by boat up and down the Potomac River seasonally and may not have lived in fixed villages, Devlin said. The ax would have been a key possession during their travels.

“When you spend the effort to make tools like this ax, you would have probably carried it with you,” he said. “You wouldn’t just make something like this off the cuff . . . and used it once or twice and chucked it . . . . This is something people invested time in. It definitely isn’t something that was just sort of pitched by the side, just by happenstan­ce.”

The ax was probably used for cutting or carving wood, he said. It probably was not a weapon.

The ax was found by students from Archbishop Hoban High School in Akron, Ohio. Fourteen students, headed by archaeolog­y teacher Jason Anderson, were helping to map out the dimensions of what is believed to be a cemetery for Mount Vernon’s enslaved African-Americans and their descendant­s.

But the area is relatively pristine and has many prehistori­c artifacts, said Joe Downer, Mount Vernon’s archaeolog­ical field research manager.

Downer said Dominic Anderson, the teacher’s son, and Phillips, the second student, called out to him when they found the ax.

“Is this anything?” Downer said they asked.

“I was kind of taken aback when I saw it,” he said in a telephone interview Wednesday. “I looked at it, and I held it for a minute, and I was like, ‘Well, that might be one of the coolest things we found out here.’ “

“It’s pretty unmistakab­le when you see it,” he said.

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