129/1933/1080
This leaf-shaped arrowhead was found at the Neolithic site at Hembury in Devon.
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139/1935/1615
129/1933/846
119/1931/265
129/1933/750
119/1931/357
139/1935/1457
129/1933/855
71/1952
Barbed and tanged arrowheads are a characteristic stone tool made in the early Bronze Age.
102/1934/768
A flint arrowhead, the leaf shape is characteristic of the Neolithic period.
119/1931/279
97/1910
Oblique arrowheads, like this example from Baggy Point in Devon, date to the Neolithic period.
129/1933/612
129/1933/792
105/1910
This Neolithic leaf-shaped arrowhead has been hafted into a modern wooden handle to show how it may originally have been used.
106/1910
This Neolithic arrowhead has been hafted into a modern wooden handle to show how it may have looked when it was first made and used.
5/1946/259
These items were described by their collector as ‘Greek arrow-heads, of various types.
119/1931/403
This arrowhead was found with nearly 100 others by the entranceway to the Neolithic causewayed enclosure at Hembury.
102/1934/7
This flint tool is part of a transverse arrowhead and dates to the Neolithic period.
129/1933/988
139/1935/1417
This stone arrowhead comes from the site of Hembury in Devon.
87/1951/332
Oblique arrowheads, like this example from Weare Giffard Cross in Devon, date to the Neolithic period.
59/1953/1
Here are two from a group of 28 examples that were probably made from locally smelted iron.
59/1953/2
54/1943/6
This leaf-shaped arrowhead dates to the Neolithic period and comes from Haldon in Devon.
51/1916/69
Used for gripping an arrow or dart shaft in order to apply bending force, or as a gauge for measuring the diameter of an arrow.
24/2021
“My work has, at its heart, a play between many opposite ideas; movement captured by stillness; fragility in nature captured in the strength of industrial, man-made materials; freedom defined within a contained space.
27/2013/155
This sand is from the collection of the late Ivor Treby.
70/2009
Nurse Elliot created this book when she worked at a military hospital in Exeter during the First World War.
5/1946/746
A bone awl, needle or piercer.