Schools
Kent State Director Of Archaeology Secures $215K Grant For Weapons Technology Analysis
Metin I. Eren has been given a $215K grant to research weapons technology of the Clovis culture from 11,000 to 12,000 years ago.

From Kent State: Move over Indiana Jones β Archaeology has a fresh new face. Metin I. Eren, director of archaeology and an assistant professor of anthropology in Kent State Universityβs College of Arts and Sciences, is using a $215,000 National Science Foundation grant to lead the analysis of weapons technology of some of North Americaβs earliest inhabitants, the Clovis culture, dating back 11,000 to 12,000 years.
Erenβs team chips away at the edges of rocks to shape them into replicas of ancient weapons and tools. The team then fits the replicas onto arrows and fires them from a high-tech projectile launcher, testing the velocities of different shapes and materials with a speed-timer while also running them through various cutting tests.
βAs they spread, Clovis spear points start to change,β Eren said. βWhat we donβt know is if they intentionally developed them to adapt to different environments or prey.β
Eren, a native of Northeast Ohio, came to Kent State University last year, from the University of Kent in Canterbury, England. The weapons analysis consists of a three-year collaborative study that includes Southern Methodist University and the University of Tulsa.
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Along with Kent State doctoral student Michelle Bebber and British Academy Post-Doctoral Fellow Alastair Key, Erenβs cutting-edge lab is covering β and uncovering β nearly every facet of ancient stone technology.
βOur goal is to make this the premier archaeology lab in North America,β Eren said. βA lot of labs have the artifacts and material science equipment, but I think what makes Kent Stateβs lab so unique is that our approach is experimental. We recreate artifacts to test them.β
βIβm studying the morphology of the edges as it relates to function, from an engineering perspective,β Key said. βIβm trying to determine if our ancestors were manufacturing tools with specific forms intended.β
When Erenβs team completes its tests, they ship the tools to Tulsa or SMU, where researchers break them in durability tests.
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Erenβs team is also doing some additional research close to home. Bebber recently received an award from the Ohio History Connection β formerly the Ohio Historical Society. The $2,500 grant will allow the team to fund field research at Berlin Lake in Mahoning County, where archaeological sites uncovered in the 1980s are now at risk for erosion and artifact looting.
βThis expands the scope of our lab to field work for conservation, which is an entirely new dimension of archaeological research for Kent State,β Bebber said. Eren and Bebber said the stone tool artifacts at the Berlin site are from the late Archaic period β 3,000 to 5,000 years old. βWeβre protecting whatβs there, but we could also find a whole series of new sites with older or more recent artifacts,β Eren said.
That work will take place this summer and create opportunities for undergraduate students to gain real field experience, Bebber said. The lab came with a room full of unexplored Ohio Hopewell artifacts from as far back as 11,000 years ago.
βWeβre making discoveries just in this room,β Eren said. βThere are hundreds of thousands of artifacts here already, and now we have grads, post-docs and undergrads all doing independent studies and publishing papers.β Read more about the Eren lab. Watch Erenβs research in action.
Image Courtesy Of Kent State
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