This comment was created by Emilia Porubcin. The last update was by Christina J. Hodge.
Heywood Walter Seton-Karr
(1859-1938)
The British soldier, explorer, and amateur archaeologist Heywood Seton-Karr was particularly interested in stone tool technologies. He located "lost" flint mines in the eastern Egyptian desert, excavating extensive extraction and processing sites near Fayum and at Wadi El-Sheikh “with the help of H. E. Johnson and the Arabs in 1896.” Harry Peterson, Stanford's first museum curator, wrote to Seton-Karr thanking him for his "especially valuable" contribution, sharing "Mrs. S [Jane Stanford] often speaks of the interest shown by you in sending the implements to a museum so far distant."This page has paths:
- People Christina J. Hodge
Contents of this path:
- Arrowhead (20135)
- Arrowhead (20138)
- Arrowhead (20139)
- Arrowhead (20144)
- Arrowhead (20141)
- Blade Pre-form (20225)
- Chert Blade (20190)
- Chert Microblade (20091)
- Chert Microblade (20087)
- Chert Microblade (20095)
- Chert Microblade (20096)
- Chert Saw Blade (20046)
- Chert Saw Blade (20045)
- Chert Saw Blade (20048)
- Core (20067)
This page has replies:
- Harry Claude Peterson Emilia Porubcin