This comment was created by Emilia Porubcin.  The last update was by Christina J. Hodge.

Our Dark Materials: Rediscovering an Egyptian Collection

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."

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  1. People Christina J. Hodge

Contents of this path:

  1. Arrowhead (20135)
  2. Arrowhead (20138)
  3. Arrowhead (20139)
  4. Arrowhead (20144)
  5. Arrowhead (20141)
  6. Blade Pre-form (20225)
  7. Chert Blade (20190)
  8. Chert Microblade (20091)
  9. Chert Microblade (20087)
  10. Chert Microblade (20095)
  11. Chert Microblade (20096)
  12. Chert Saw Blade (20046)
  13. Chert Saw Blade (20045)
  14. Chert Saw Blade (20048)
  15. Core (20067)

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  1. Harry Claude Peterson Emilia Porubcin

Contents of this reply:

  1. Harry Claude Peterson
  2. Jane Lathrop Stanford