| Davistown Museum Native American Artifacts | Coffin Stream Assemblage |
| | Status | Location |
| 071003NA17 | Projectile point | photo | DTM | CSA- | shelf 1 |
| Stone, 6 cm x 3 cm, , middle archaic. |
| A "stark" projectile point, probably the oldest one in the Coffin Steam Assemblage (6,000 to 8,000 years old). Points like this |
| are rare in Maine. |
| 071003NA19 | Projectile point | photo | DTM | CSA- | shelf 1 |
| Stone, 5 cm x 3 cm, , late archaic. |
| A large spear point. |
| 071003NA21 | Projectile point | photo | DTM | CSA- | shelf 1 |
| Stone, 5 cm x 2 cm, , middle archaic. |
| A side notch spear point. |
| 071003NA18 | Projectile points (2) | photo | DTM | CSA- | shelf 1 |
| Stone, 5 cm x 1.5 cm; 2 cm x 2 cm, . |
| Both are "Squibnocket" small stemmed points. |
| 071003NA22 | Projectile points (3) | photo | DTM | CSA- | shelf 1 |
| Stone, 5 cm x 2 cm; 6 cm x 3.5 cm; 7 cm x 3 cm, , late archaic. |
| Large sized spear points with stems, AKA "Susquehanna". |
| 071003NA34 | Whetstone | photo | DTM | CSA- | shelf 1 |
| Stone, 10 cm x 3 cm, , unknown date. |
| Whetstones are used for "whetting" or sharpening a tool by rubbing it against the stone. |
| 071003NA42 | Whetstone and abrader | DTM | CSA- | shelf 1 |
| Stone, 22 cm x 5 cm; 13 cm x 5 cm, , unknown date. |
| Native American Artifacts II - Ceramic Period |
| Ceramics |
| 070303NA9 | Ceramic shard | photo | DTM | CSA- | shelf 2 |
| Clay, 3 cm x 3 cm, . |
| Debitage undecorated (larger). |
| 070303NA8 | Ceramic shard | photo | DTM | CSA- | shelf 2 |
| Clay, 2.5 cm x 2.75 cm, . |
| It has a debitage fabric impressed decoration. |
| 070303NA7 | Ceramic shard | photo | DTM | CSA- | shelf 2 |
| Clay, 2 cm x 1.5 cm, . |
| It has a debitage fabric impressed decoration. |
| 070303NA10 | Ceramic shard | photo | DTM | CSA- | shelf 2 |
| Clay, 3 cm x 1.5 cm, . |
| Debitage undecorated (smaller). |
| Stone Tools |
| 071003NA20 | Projectile point | photo | DTM | CSA- | shelf 1 |
| Stone, 6 cm x 1.5 cm, . |
| An "Orient fishtail" spear point. Points like this are not common in Maine. |
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