Abstract
Much of the archived stone tool material found in Northern Sweden are stray finds not tied to an extensively documented archaeological site. This situation has led to artifacts seldom being revisited after being deposited in an archive. As a result, many recovered stone tools are overlooked and poorly documented. The aim of the project was to survey and document the stone tool material stored in Norrbottens county’s many museums. Most of these tools have been collected since the 1850s and onward with many being gifted to private or public archives in the early 1900s. The stone tools presented in this paper were made from various types of stone raw materials and belong to the typological groups; axes, chisels, clubs, and northbonian implements. The production date of the axes is unknown but is expected to have been produced mainly during the Neolithic and Epineolithic periods (4200–1000 B.C.) but may also been used during the Bronze Age and perhaps even into the 300s AD. The presented data provides opportunities to expand lithic typological analysis and spatial analysis in northern Fennoscandia.
