Pertaining to or denoting lithium or some of its compounds.
Pertaining to, or formed of rock.
a stone tool Mississippi: A Site for All Seasons
stone materials, used often as a general term for stone tools and weapons
rock materials; in archaeological sites, refers to the materials used to manufacture stone tools by chipping or grinding.
Of or pertaining to a stone (obsidian, chert, basalt, etc.), as in lithic artifacts.
Stone. Also, the earliest stage in the Willey and Phillips system (Cassells 1997:336).
A stone artifact, either chipped stone or ground stone.
Of or pertaining to stone. In archaeology, lithic artifacts include ground and chipped stone tools and the debris resulting from their manufacture.
A stone artifact, usually in the form of a stone tool. Archaeologists frequently find lithic artifacts at archaeological sites because humans used to make their tools out of stone before they used metal.
Stone tool or the debris from stone tool manufacture.
scatter — Is a surface scatter of cultural artifacts and debris that consists entirely of lithic (i.e., stone) tools and chipped stone debris. This is a common prehistoric site type that is contrasted to a cultural material scatter, which contains other or additional artifact types such as pottery or bone artifacts, to a camp which contains habitation features, such as hearths, storage features or occupation features, or to other site types that contain different artifacts or features.