They Noticed These Humps In A Field And Decided To Check Them Out. What They Found Surprised Them!
In the years past we did a lot of field walking in the fall but since the old permissions have been either hunted out or they’ve gone to no till farming that hasn’t been an option for us. That’s not the case in south central Mississippi where Matthew and Chris live. Up there you never know when a prime site will be plowed or disked which is what happened a few days ago and the boys up there took advantage of it. A while back they had noticed this field had some unusual humps or rises in it. These are generally a good sign there may have been ancient human activity because for some reason ancient native American peoples like these rises in the environment. That was definitely the case in this field. If you look close you can see the rises and that is where the vast majority of the artifacts were found. They are huge. Matthew and Chris are actually on top of them. So come along and let’s take a look at some of the cool arrowheads they found.
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Heartbreaker Relics
P.O. Box 83
Long Beach, MS 39560
Thanks to Mike Crowe with PineBeltRelics for helping us identify our arrowheads.
Music:
"Someday - Instrumental" by Ryan Scott Travis
"Train Song" by Josh Garrels
"Thunderbird" by Ryan Taubert
Пікірлер: 375
If I had known this video was going to get this many views, I would have dressed nicer. Thanks everyone for the nice comments!
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
I was thinking the same thing 😂
@Cooper260
5 ай бұрын
lol
@fleabitis
5 ай бұрын
The title teased “low mound.” Was there a mound in the immediate area? If so, generally speaking, what distance were you from it? A couple of the points looked “ceremonial” or perhaps discards from the flaking process. All in all, great hunting!
@jurtimmermans1486
5 ай бұрын
Were a ty next time!
@Rapman21
4 ай бұрын
How do they date them?
My mother was a good hunter. We lived on an Indian rondaveau point on two connecting creeks. She would find arrow heads, Hachette stone, tapping stones. She found quartz arrow stone from 60 miles away from where we lived, at our farm. Up about a mile away was the settlers rondoveau point between two settlements . we lived in central North Ga.
Nice finds! Congrats to Chris and Matthew! Thanks for sharing Spike!
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thanks. Our pleasure. Thank you for watching.
Thank yall for making the time to make a video we love them
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thanks. It is our pleasure.
Awesome permission!! Thanks for sharing the fun👍👍
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
It sure is! Our pleasure. Thanks for watching.
This one man always walked dad's field overlooking the river when it was plowed. He found tons of stuff. Lovely music.
@HeartbreakerRelics
5 ай бұрын
Thanks.
@artm5294
Ай бұрын
What about the humps in the field ? CLICK BAIT ! 👎👎👎🇨🇦
This is so neat! Makes me want to be out in the fields too. I also love rocks. As a kid I always loved the outdoors and would still rather be out in Gods creation as stuck in the house. Love to explore!
I’m envious you guys are having so much fun. I would love to find some Indian relics. Good job!
We love your videos from New Mexico! You inspire us! Homeschool grandma and grandkids! We look everyday for a new video!
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thanks. We wish we could get one out every day. Look for them every other Friday at 10 AM.
@jeanf8998
3 ай бұрын
Hey homie’ I’m from NM north of Santa Fe south of Taos. Been living in Georgia and the people here are good. Still miss New Mexico! God Bless😊
Spike I really enjoy your videos my father passed away last year my brothers don't hunt them anymore so I go very little these days thank you
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thanks. I am so sorry to hear that. God bless!
@blueboy450
6 ай бұрын
Me and dad fished together, but he passed in 1999. I haven’t been since
@billylongmont3438
6 ай бұрын
@@blueboy450you should try going again, I bet you'd feel your dad all around you. Best wishes
So much fun. I love the tools as much as the points. Those folks sure must have had a lot of things to scrape back in the day.
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Yes it is. That's what I keep saying too lol.
Keep living right, God loves you, Thank you for the Nov video
The humble one will come out on top. I think Chris has something really good in store! I'm guessing Matt walks fast and covers alot of ground. I use to think my boyfriend was lucky until I figured out his secret. Once your good at something you have to cover alot of ground. (If your eyes will let you) Great Video again Spike! ❤
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thanks. That's arrowhead hunting for you. Next trip everything may flip in Chris' favor lol.
@dewey_digginnc4946
6 ай бұрын
Cool to see you here.. these guys find some killer stuff in the creek during the summer time and dig some good stuff up as well.. I felt like I broke my arm swinging for a button today. I cant wait till hunting season ends to walk my new stuff.. cant wait to see the big teeth.. I know we got them in our rivers i just don't dive..
When I was growing up in Northern Illinois I always followed plowing in the spring have a good collection of arrowheads along with a tomohawk and several other items. Enjoyed your hunt!
@HeartbreakerRelics
5 ай бұрын
Very cool! Thanks.
My wife grew up in Plymouth MA, as kids her and her friends found dozens of arrowheads in the woods behind her house. Turns out the pilgrims had built a fort in that area in 1600's that was attacked and destroyed by Indians in King Philipps War. It was on the Eel River in what is now a residential neighborhood.
As always enjoyed watching thanks for sharing and good luck on your next outdoor adventure
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thanks.
I always enjoy the Heartbreaker gang's content. Thanks for always making great videos guys. Congrats on the finds!
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thanks so much!
Hello from Australia great finds indeed.
Glad to see those fellas finding some nice relics.
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thanks Jack. So am I.
I enjoy watching you guys
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thank you sir!
Wow! The Matthew saga continues. Enjoyed the video 👍🏹
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thanks John.
Looks like a lot of fun !!!! Wish i could do this. I work on a farm in Asia and found stone tools lots of them in an area that inwas told once had a cave higger up on a hill but they blasted through to make a road. Bigger stone tools and stone cylinders points axes etc....
Need to check all the oversized stones for carved petroglyphs on them. As I've seen a few and my brother found one. Right in the middle of where thisansands of people had passed it by.
Congratulations fellas. Good job on video as always Mr. Spike.
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thank you kindly.
I once found a spear point that was about 9 inches long. I found it in a yard in Cleveland Ohio. That was very surprising. Years ago I was showing it to my friend and I dropped it on a cement floor and tragically it broke in half. It was still an amazing find. I bet you guys have a great collection of points. You guys made a really good video. I'm glad there are a lot of these still out there to be found.
@fado792
3 ай бұрын
Thats how we lose our past.
2 ай бұрын
One moment of carlessness and you break an artifact that sat for thousands and thousands of years. That's how easy it happens. Dont hold artifacts over hard surfaces or hold them high above any surface. Hate hearing that story over and over again, that rock sat there thousands of years only for someone to find it and break it within minutes or seconds even sometimes. Sucks
@dena1775
23 күн бұрын
What do you think they were hunting?
22 күн бұрын
@@dena1775 any animal you would hunt today. Finding points doesn't mean they were meant for , used during, or ever used at all as a projectile. 90+ percent of points people find that they jump to conclude were projectiles were never projectiles at all but knives/cutting implements.
@fado792
21 күн бұрын
A collection of points. And know nothing about the makers and where and how they lived. Posession is the American word. Not asking.
Used to do this when I lived in Missouri. I haven't seen anything where I live in Texas.
Great hunt and find video , thanks for sharing. Congratulations fellas
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Our pleasure! Thanks.
The music was an excellent touch .
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thanks.
A fascinating video. Thanks a lot.
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Our pleasure. Thanks for watching.
he has a sharp eye! I would have never known that they were arrowhead at first sight!
Awesome finds!!!👍👍👍👍👍👍
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thanks.
Yay! Way to go!
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thanks!
Thank you for sharing this most outstanding adventure. 👍👍👍👊
@HeartbreakerRelics
21 күн бұрын
Our pleasure! Thanks for watching.
Most in our area are made from flint stone which is mostly opaque navy ranging to gray with a little white mingled in. Yours looks to be a different type of rock maybe yellow tinted. I did find years ago some type of tool or maybe the blade half of a really thick tomahawk that is really smooth limestone rock.
I thought it was an awesome hunt,Spike 😎👊!!!!! Killer finds, y'all !!!!!💥
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thanks. We thought so too.
@historylooker7
6 ай бұрын
@@HeartbreakerRelics 👍
Yep, that was a good day in the field for sure
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Yes it was. Can't complain about that at all.
Good video keep them coming thanks
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thanks, will do!
good stuff y’all ! enjoyed it ✌️🤠
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thanks. We're glad you enjoyed it.
Good stuff fellers!! 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thanks Mike!
Spectacular!
Very nice finds 👊 😎
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thanks 👍
The fields remind me of the neighbors farm next to our home. The woods at the edge and pond even look the same. But crazy thing is I was walking in that area a couple months ago and I found a place near the creek where a plow must have removed a layer of soil for some reason. Erosion from recent rain had also made it deeper. I noticed a foot or more beneath the top soil layer a bunch of white oyster shells. It made no sense except that I have heard there are huge piles of them near the ocean that were left from Native American settlements. That’s about 40 miles from us. Now Im wondering if there might be arrowheads and stone tools strewn around in plain sight. And ordinary rocks will now look different to me and I’ll have to take a closer look next time for arrowheads next time the till the fields! As well our home sits on a weird mound that is almost shaped like a pyramid. There are a few weird similar hills nestled in the woods and not really noticeable unless you lived there. I’ve always wondered if it’s an old mound and the builders weren’t aware.
@HeartbreakerRelics
4 ай бұрын
Interesting!
You've done better in one day, than I have in numerous times here in Indiana!!! And i now can't wait for May to go looking again !!!
@HeartbreakerRelics
5 ай бұрын
Good luck!
@michaeldriskell2038
5 ай бұрын
@@HeartbreakerRelics Thanks !! Happy hunting to you all there !!
Great stuff guys
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thanks.
Thank you for sharing.
@HeartbreakerRelics
Ай бұрын
Our pleasure. Thanks for watching.
Love the Josh Garrels tune! He’s my favorite!
@HeartbreakerRelics
28 күн бұрын
Thanks. I think he's awesome!
Great video I enjoyed it!
@HeartbreakerRelics
3 ай бұрын
Thanks.
Blessed hunt!
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Yes it was. Thanks.
I ask God for something from the ancient times and instantly my dredge stopped and I have a war ax head that I cherished ? It’s awesome to think , just like what y’all are finding !!! Awesome
Let’s go, let’s go treasure and adventure🇺🇸🌺💕✌️👵🌎🎉
Impressive finds! Good for them!
@HeartbreakerRelics
3 ай бұрын
Thanks 👍
@chrisgullett4332
3 ай бұрын
No an impressive find is finding the body of the Sphinx.
Hey guys love your content!! Very interesting and knowledgeable I was wondering if you guys could talk a little more about the arrowheads you find like approximate age of the find and any other information you may know like maybe even the tribe also how do you tell the age of some of these arrowheads . Thank you and keep up the good shows please
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thanks. Think of these artifacts as pre-tribal. They are many thousands of years old. When we can identify them we will usually throw a graphic up on the screen.
@RobertQuick-gz9vr
6 ай бұрын
Thanks for getting back to me ! I appreciate that and you all very much. Also love the respect you guys give this hobby.. Definitely a different way of life they had it’s hard to fathom.
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
I think that's the part that fascinates me so much, how they lived. I know it was a struggle but the more we do this the more I realize they had mastered nature. I don't think they wanted for a lot.
You guys are so lucky .
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thanks. We really are.
We are in Historic Guthrie, Oklahoma and we have unearthed an arrowhead and some old time horse shoes we have a huge nail or spike that has been in the tree for decades. Lots of history here. The first capital of Oklahoma and the great American Land Run. Wendy❤️🙏🏻🇺🇸
@HeartbreakerRelics
2 ай бұрын
So cool!
Man they were on them!
Very nice hunting grounds. Those round holes or pockets on the sides of some of those points are caused by forest fire, great finds. Cheers from Jacksonville Florida 🌞
@HeartbreakerRelics
5 ай бұрын
Thanks for your input. It is much appreciated.
Love y’all’s videos, that Matthew and Chris tear me up the way they get along. Keep up the good work fellas. Any chance you could tell me who’s singing on this video starts at around the 4 minute mark or so. Thanks again for the great videos
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thanks. That would be Josh Garrels. All our music is always listed in the description.
@user-ed8jz1ih6q
6 ай бұрын
Thank you sir
The reason the Native Americans liked the uneven terrain is that it broke up the horizon making it easier to conceal themselves.
Hey Matt , You look for things that I like to find
Wow you don't know what s out there good time spent looking at 😊
@HeartbreakerRelics
2 ай бұрын
Thanks
Nice old John Prine song. I would call that American Grey flint.
Merry Christmas y’all from Northeast Mississippi ‼️
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Same to you my friend!
Awesome finds. Y'all were finding those grinding stones...I once found a grinding stone and bowl together. Unfortunate for me and history, it was on Federal property and I had to leave it.
@HeartbreakerRelics
3 ай бұрын
Thanks.
I kinda miss them jokers. Just a bit... 🤣 Another nice hunt.
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thanks Will. You miss them like a toothache lol?
Hello, if you did that here in Australia the police would be knocking on your door the next day ,here all aboriginal artefacts are protected even when the foreshore committee wants to work on the sand dunes they have to get an aboriginal arceologist to search the area prior to work so no sacred items are distributed
The ones with flat side If they have a curve to it could be a drill. Or a flub up as ive called them as a kid lol. Finding the perfect point is rare . ever find halves and find the other half years later? 😂yup it happen to me. Great video guys 😎👍
@HeartbreakerRelics
Ай бұрын
Thanks. Yes, I have matched up several broken ones.
Love doing this in north east Alabama along the upper cossa etowah and Cherokee county long history of native Americans long lost treasure and even exploring littleriver canyon markings on the wall of canyon if you look hard
If you can find stuff like that on the surface, there must be untold numbers of artefacts below the ground. There must also have been untold numbers of humans inhabitants at some time.
@HeartbreakerRelics
Ай бұрын
Correct on both counts.
8m building a garage on a plateau overlooking georgian bay. J noticed 2 such mounds, they told me theyre rock piles. I doubt it. Ive got permission to investigate at least. Without shows like this, i wouldnt even know what to l9ok for.
New sub here. Great channel! I love your logo.
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thank you very much!
i wish i had that kind of good luck finding stuff!
@HeartbreakerRelics
3 ай бұрын
Luck is a factor but hard work and asking permission is a huge part of it.
once u start looking, u cant stop.
@HeartbreakerRelics
4 ай бұрын
Yep
Digging up graves!! 🫵🏻😘💪🏻🇺🇸🇮🇱!!
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
We don't get a lot of comments like this but every now and then and nut will fall out of a tree.
Nice finds, as always guys! Don't hate me for pointing this out, but it looks like Chris missed the tip of that archaic barbed while trying to film the pull... it appears to be just under that clump of grass @ 9:41. It's too bad this footage is not as recent as it would need to be for you to even have a chance at going back to relocate it 🙃
@shakascloset1700
6 ай бұрын
I just commented the same thing. 😂
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
I just got off the phone with Chris' about this. lol
That young man has a good eye.
@HeartbreakerRelics
5 ай бұрын
Yes he does.
I knew someone who used to say "I live my life right". Cops found a lot in the crawlspace of his house.
Those are different than the arrowheads I have found in Illinois and Michigan, there are lots of them.
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
When you find one let us know.
At 9:39 you could see the tip fragment still in place before he picked it up.
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thanks. I just talked to Chris on the phone about that lol.
When you find hollowed out rocks look like a bowl . This cookware doesn't pass down to the daughter, goes to the Granddaughter. The deeper the bowl the older the bowl.
Can you explain your walking sticks, thanks great video?
Here in northern Ohio, in some fields I would find them pretty regular and in some fields I never found any. When I was a kid(1968) we were digging a hideout in the bank of the Grand River, across the river from Fairport. We found this clay jar about four gallon capacity. The jar was capped with some hard material that wasn't clay. I broke away most of it with my knife. There was some dried moss and there were bones in there. We took it to a neighbor's cottage because he was a school teacher. He told us that they were human bones and he would call the museum in Cleveland. The next day he told us that the museum said that they have enough old bones. We put tar paper over the top of the jar and placed it back in the hole. The next day my cousin said that the jar was gone. Apparently some local collector of relics had taken it. A couple years later the Corps of Engineers dug out that whole area and destroyed the Mound Builder burial site.
@HeartbreakerRelics
5 ай бұрын
Awesome story! Thanks for sharing it.
C'mon now. How do you find a field full of points?! I haven't found one yet. Where best to hunt for these? Thanks for the vid.
I guess I missed the part about the mystery humps?? I fell for the bait this time
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Sorry about the misunderstanding. Didn't mean it for bait and we could have done a better job explaining. You could see the humps or rises in the field. Almost every artifact came off these humps. Obviously they were occupational areas for ancient native Americans.
how did they lose all those arrow heads in that same spot and you found them with a stick be safe god bless
@HeartbreakerRelics
Ай бұрын
Thanks and God bless you and yours as well. If you think about it, every stone tool ever made is still out there somewhere unless it was ran through a crusher. Some are damaged, some aren't. The people that made them strictly as utilitarian tools. They would leave many behind as they moved to another location never to return to them.
I think you should show a summary of all the finds of the day cleaned up and displayed.
@HeartbreakerRelics
4 ай бұрын
We've done that in the past but to be honest the vast majority of people don't want to see that. Our analytics have shown that. When people click out of the video early it hurts us with the algorithm. We're actually punished when we do that.
@outlaw_80
4 ай бұрын
@@HeartbreakerRelicsMy uncle hunted artifacts for over 45 years.. When I was a kid I used to go hunting with him. He once found a 6.5 inch Clovis one day I was with him. It was perfect. Many years went by and my uncle is gone now. Not long ago my son and i was looking at some of his finds and I got to see that Clovis again. Between that day and viewing your videos it's motivated me to start hunting again. Oh also looking at the sea green obsidian Rutz Clovis that was found in the 50s.. Ive come to learn it takes many many hours of hard hunting to find the "real gems" thanks for the videos and I hope you guys have many more blessed hunts ahead of you.👍
Proverbs 20:6 Most men will proclaim every one his own goodness: but a faithful man who can find?
BATESVILLE AND BLESSINGS ON Y ALL AND YALLS HOUSE
@HeartbreakerRelics
2 ай бұрын
Thanks and on yours as well.
Nice finds ,, Hey who is this Song by how do i find it ,, ? Thanks for sharing 👍
@HeartbreakerRelics
3 ай бұрын
Music is listed in the description.
I'm sorry, but where do you get those massive collector cases? To display your artifacts.
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
This is where we've been getting them the past year. Great cases. facebook.com/profile.php?id=100085095387581
I have been told my property is in the area of where a bunch of native Indians had villages, huge creek at back of my land, I don’t have the resources to go plow it up and look for stuff though
How is it that everything in that field ,1:30, is dirt covered and dirt colored except the arrow head that he pulls out of the ground? It clean yellowish color.
@HeartbreakerRelics
5 ай бұрын
That part was sticking out of the ground and the rain washed it clean.
@bevb752
Ай бұрын
My thoughts also
The stones just look like stones to me. I wouldn’t have even given them a second look. Where would be a good place to research stones to learn to see these stones as artifacts?
@HeartbreakerRelics
3 ай бұрын
I'm not sure. A lot of it depends on context too. Finding and odd stone on a known NA site screams look at me and investigate.
nice finds! btw why was there so much black plastic in the soil? was it a dump?
@HeartbreakerRelics
3 ай бұрын
Thanks. That's plastic from covering the crops. It will degrade in a short time.
I kept watching for the exploration of the mounds.....still waiting
@HeartbreakerRelics
3 ай бұрын
They were all over them picking up the arrowheads. They are actually high "occupational" areas in the landscape. The NA preferred high level ground just out of the flood plain to live on.
The tip was still in the dirt, check the clip at 9:42
What is with all the black plastic in the field? Like the song you played in the middle of the video.
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thanks. The plastic is used too keep weed growth down when row crops are planted. It is biodegradable.
Excellent video 👍👍 some of those points look like they could be atlattle points.
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
Thanks. You are correct. Most are atlatl points, others are knives. No true arrow points were found in this video.
I enjoy these videos just wish they could increase the volume🤷♂️
Nice hunt gentlemen. What is the name of the song that is in the video? You mentioned living a good life. I often think about “ the steps of a good man are ordered by the Lord”.
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
It's "Train Song" by Josh Garrells. Thanks.
Any info on the humps in the field?
@HeartbreakerRelics
6 ай бұрын
They're not sure of the origins, natural or occupation build-up but that's where the majority of the artifacts were found.