Primitive skills

Bushmen from Botswana demonstrate how to create a friction fire using two sticks

Primitive skills refers to prehistoric handicrafts and pre-industrial technology. Primitive skills are those skills that relate to living off the land, often using handcrafted tools made from naturally gathered materials. Examples of primitive skills include: 1. foraging native plants and animals for food. This skill set often includes medicinal herbalism, edible wild plants, making and deploying primitive traps, snares, fishing rigs, and bows and arrows. 2. skinning and preparing game, including hide tanning with bark or brains, harvesting parts of the animal like sinew for bow string and sewing thread. Primitive cooking methods include rock pits, spits, and open-fire. 3. One of the foundational primitive skills is friction fire including the hand drill and the bow-drill methods. 4. basketry includes the identification and harvesting of appropriate materials, and many basket and weaving types. Popular primitive basket materials are pine needles, wild grape vine, and split oak bark. 5. pottery can include the gathering of native clays, shaping and decorating raw vessels, and firing the clay in an open fire 6. weaving including finger weaving, netting, back-strap looms make up a large art-form in and of itself. 7. Pigmenting fiber, leather or pottery with natural dyes like the yellow of goldenrod. 8. Flint-knapping is the art of lithic reduction, or breaking rocks at specific angles and places to form working tools like arrowheads.

Interest in primitive skills has coincided with a resurgence in interest in natural and self-sufficient living techniques. In North America, primitive skills enthusiasts often emulate Native-American traditional crafts. In Europe, primitive skills enthusiasts often practice traditional Bronze and Iron Age art forms.[1]

Although the term is often used interchangeably with wilderness survival, survival, or bushcraft, primitive skills are a specific subset of these subject areas that use few or no "modern" tools.

See also

References

  1. "Society of Primitive Technology: About". 2009. Retrieved 19 September 2009.

External links

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