Adze Blade

97-120-973

From: United States of America | Hawaiian Islands

Curatorial Section: Oceanian

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Object Number 97-120-973
Current Location Collections Storage
Culture Hawaiian
Provenience United States of America | Hawaiian Islands
Culture Area Oceania | Polynesia
Section Oceanian
Materials Stone
Description

A long, slender, rectangular adze blade (koʻi) made of stone. The blade is smoothed and greenish-gray in colour. The butt end is tappered and chipped, and the front of the blade is curved with a chipped edge.

Hawaiian adzes (koʻi) were essential woodworking tools in pre-contact Hawaiʻi, central to house construction, canoe building, and fine carving. Adze blades were primarily made from dense, fine-grained basalt or compact volcanic lava. Blades were shaped through systematic flaking with hammerstones and then ground smooth using stone slabs with sand and water; smaller adzes were occasionally fashioned from shell for lighter tasks. Metal, primarily iron, could be used for the blade post-European contact. Koʻi varied in size and form, including narrow, thick blades suited for deep cutting and broader, thinner blades designed for smoothing, with cutting angles adjusted to the hardness of specific woods. The blades were hafted to wooden handles (ʻau) using coconut fiber or ʻolonā cord lashings. If dulled significantly or broken, the blades could be replaced.

Length 12.3 cm
Width 4.3 cm
Credit Line Gift of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 1997
Other Number L-120-973 - Old Museum Number | 10557 - ANSP Number | 489? - Collector Number | 419? - Collector Number

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