To understand the scope of work represented at the GMC Quarry, archaeologists used the extensive research from five decades of excavations and reports from the quarries for
Knife River Flint in
North Dakota. The mining techniques used there created a very similar landscape, and used tools that were very familiar to Indigenous farming communities in Minnesota by 1000CE. To reach the layer of GMC nodules, workers needed a variety of tools. First, they needed to cut through the
prairie grasses with deep roots, for which a chert knife would have been ideal. If roots from the occasional
bur oak were in the way, axes might have been needed to remove that obstacle—and archaeologists have found ground stone axes within the quarry area
. A sharpened digging stick would then be used to chop into the earth to loosen the dirt, an essential tool used for planting crops in small fields along the creek sides in all of the surrounding villages at that time. Digging through the soil produced a lot of dirt that needed to be removed. The removal of the loosened earth was accomplished by scraping the dirt into baskets using a hoe made from the shoulder blade of a bison or more rarely from stone, which is known to be the technique used by many generations for building burial and
effigy mounds. The baskets of dirt were probably then handed in a daisy chain that led up and out of the deeper pits. Ramps leading out of many pits can still be seen within the chert quarry today. The baskets of dirt were emptied on the rim of the pit where the work was underway, and some were taken to fill in an older pit. Both of those strategies can be seen at the GMC Quarry/Wanhi Yukan, where some pits are shallow compared to others nearby, while some remain very deep, with high rims of dirt.The presence of large
anvil stones near some quarry pits indicates that as the nodules were removed from the holes they were tested for quality, and at least partly reduced reduced for easier transport.
Debitage observed in nearby fields within the chert quarry area, along with numerous
hammerstones and both large and small anvil stones, indicate that the
lithic reduction of the nodules frequently occurred on site.
Flintknapping debris is widespread throughout the plowed acres in the area, and its density patterns were used to determine the extent of the original mining activities. Although few completed chipped stone tools have been found near the GMC Quarry, large quantities of broken pieces of chert tools suggest that further reduction may have occurred on the edge of pits as well, in addition to those that were transported to nearby workshop areas for the final stages of manufacturing. In some cases, whole nodules were distributed to distant villages, providing the means for later reduction and manufacturing. == Uses of Grand Meadow Chert ==