David, I really don´t think we should try and dub each other naive - it serves no good purpose.
I think you are launching a project that won´t float here, simple as that. You speak about cartilagenous breastplates and such things, but don´t you think that Killeen would have established what kind of material the blade went through BEFORE he made his assertion? No?
You may of course argue that he too was "naive" and just chanced that the blade hade travelled through bone, but if I have to choose between your chance suggestion and Killeens hard work at the slab, well... I´m sorry, bro, but I´m with the good doctor all the way on this one.
My wording on the shape of the hole produced in bone still stands, by the way: If you shove a blade through bone at a ninety-degree angle, you will get a very good "imprint" of what the blade looked like. It´s exactly the same with many hard materials like for example wood, as you will know. If the blade is NOT shoved through the bone at a ninety-degree angle, it will be more difficult to establish the exact shape of it, just as it will be if there is any wiggling of some sort involved.
This all becomes very uninteresting if we have dagger blades that resemble bayonet blades and vice versa, though. And I´m not sure to what extent Killeen was updated on all blades on the market of them days.
I do, however, suspect that he only suggested a dagger, whereafter it would have been asked if it could have been a bayonet. And if Killeen was not aquainted with the looks of all the bayonet blades around, he may have said "well, possibly...", and then the papers would have taken care of the rest.
Not to realize this is completely nai... Oh, sorry! Well, you take my meaning, don´t you? And who says you DON´t realize it?
The best,
Fisherman
I think you are launching a project that won´t float here, simple as that. You speak about cartilagenous breastplates and such things, but don´t you think that Killeen would have established what kind of material the blade went through BEFORE he made his assertion? No?
You may of course argue that he too was "naive" and just chanced that the blade hade travelled through bone, but if I have to choose between your chance suggestion and Killeens hard work at the slab, well... I´m sorry, bro, but I´m with the good doctor all the way on this one.
My wording on the shape of the hole produced in bone still stands, by the way: If you shove a blade through bone at a ninety-degree angle, you will get a very good "imprint" of what the blade looked like. It´s exactly the same with many hard materials like for example wood, as you will know. If the blade is NOT shoved through the bone at a ninety-degree angle, it will be more difficult to establish the exact shape of it, just as it will be if there is any wiggling of some sort involved.
This all becomes very uninteresting if we have dagger blades that resemble bayonet blades and vice versa, though. And I´m not sure to what extent Killeen was updated on all blades on the market of them days.
I do, however, suspect that he only suggested a dagger, whereafter it would have been asked if it could have been a bayonet. And if Killeen was not aquainted with the looks of all the bayonet blades around, he may have said "well, possibly...", and then the papers would have taken care of the rest.
Not to realize this is completely nai... Oh, sorry! Well, you take my meaning, don´t you? And who says you DON´t realize it?
The best,
Fisherman
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