a tool used for scraping items such as hides
A stone tool that is modified for the specific task of scraping; for example, to scrape the meat from hides.
A metal instrument with a three-sided blade used to remove the curled burrs made when engraving an image onto a metal plate.
A stiff bladed knife, usually between 1 to 4 inches wide, used for general preparation work and paint stripping.
A load-haul-dump machine in which the bowl is towed behind a tractor unit, fills by a planing action, hauls the spoil to the dump site and empties by means of an internal ejector blade pushing forward. Used in soft ground or in ground that fragments well after ripping or blasting.
A tool presumably used in scraping, scouring, or planing functions. Most frequently refers to flaked stone artifacts with one or more steep UNIFACIALLY RETOUCHED edge(s).
any of various hand tools for scraping
A tool used to remove Paint from surfaces
A tool used to smooth the track surface.
A tool used to coat screen fabrics with photosensitive emulsions. Also a tool to remove ink from a screen.
A tool used to scrape away old wallpaper, glue and adhesives.
Three-edged knife for scraping metal surface in etching. In Lithography, a scraper is the bar that applies the press pressure to the paper.
Tool used to scrape off old compounds from surfaces. Home Improvement Encyclopedia
A steel blade, the edges of which are slightly rounded and then burred with a file.
A flat-bladed tool used to remove paint, wallpaper and other finishes. Wide blades available for wallpaper and narrow blades for paint.
A scraper is a type of stone tool, with at least one working edge. They were probably used for wood-working or scraping animal hides.
A stone tool thought to be used for scraping, planning, or scouring.
A tool used to remove tissue from the interior surface of hides, to smooth wood, and for other tasks. The edge angle on most scrapers is high (Cassells 1997:338).
A stone tool designed for used in scraping hides, bones and other similar materials in the preparation of food, clothing and shelter. A small stone blade with uniface flaking.
Ideal tool for those who make their own pasta, or pastry, bread and pizza dough. Use it for cutting, cleaning and scraping the dough.
A bone or stone tool used to scrape the fat from hides in order to prepare the skins for use.
In intaglio, a wedge-shaped steel tool used for removing burrs and moderating other effects of etching or engraving. In lithography, a leather-covered blade that presses the paper against the inked stone or plate.
A knife-like surface mounted on the inside or outside surface of a belt to remove unwanted material deposits.
1. Type of earthmover which is used to level and grade the ground for roadways or on constructions sites by use of a cutting blade under the machine which scrapes the soil and deposits it in the bucket. 2. Hardened edged tool which scrapes surfaces clean.
In archeology, scrapers are unifacial tools that were used either for hideworking or woodworking purposes. Whereas this term is often used for any unifacially flaked stone tool that defies classification, most lithic analysts maintain that the only true scrapers are defined on the base of use-wear, and usually are those which were worked from the distal ends of blades-- i.e., "end scrapers" or grattoirs. Other scrapers include the so-called "side scrapers" or racloirs, which are stuck from the longest side of a flake, and notched scrapers, which have a cleft on either side which may have been used to attach them to something else.