Of all the tools in our society, only the wheel and the lever can compete with the common household knife for the title of All-Time Most Useful. As necessary in the kitchen as it is on the battlefield, and necessary in a wide range of trades and crafts, the knife is one of the construction blocks of civilization.
Knife History
Stair Lift Story
Not only is it useful, but the knife is possibly the oldest human tool. Rudimentary knives have been discovered among what anthropologists call the Oldowan tools - the oldest stone tool assemblage in history, used between 2.5 and 1.5 million years ago by various hominids fluctuating from Australopithecus to Homo habilis. These earliest knives were basically well-sharpened rocks used to butcher dead animals. Homo habilis was, agreeing to current scientific consensus, the species that made the imaginative leap of fashioning similar sharp points from pieces of wood and bone. Later, while the Paleolithic Era (a time period which overlaps with the later Oldowon tools) these wood and bone knives gave way in their turn to knives made from flint, a extra form of the mineral quartz, then copper (introduced ca. 8000 Bce), bronze (ca. 3300 Bce), iron (1500 Bce), and (later still) steel (ca. 1400 Bce), as the craft of metallurgy emerged. The bronze and iron knives, while they lacked the greatest sharpness of flint knives, offered greater durability.
Technological advances have continued to yield new options for knifemakers; today knives made of carbon fiber, titanium, earthenware and other materials are common. But archaeologists, knife collectors and enthusiasts, and organizations such as the American Bladesmith Society, continue to uphold the craft of old-fashioned metal knifemaking. The centrality of knives to civilized decorum in the Western world (they are one of the three utensils used with any meal), their proximity in many myths, legends and ceremonies all over the world, and their appeal to antiquarians and forces historians ensure that knives remain a meaningful, not just practical, part of human culture. From surgery to electron microscopy, from diving to diamond-cutting, knives are everywhere, and they occupy leading places in some of world culture's greatest stories - the reduce of Isaac, or the obsidian knife of Titlacahuan, Quetzalcoatl's brother, in Toltec mythology.
Knife Safety
Of course, knives are, if improperly handled, as perilous as they are necessary. But with a little common sense, and knowledge of knife safety procedures, that danger can be minimized.
- always cut away from your body when using a knife.
- Don't try to grab a dropped knife in midair. Let it fall, then pick it up by the handle.
- Never run with a knife, and don't carry a knife while being propelled in open air.
- If lending your knife to person else, hand it over to them cope first.
- Knives aren't toys. Don't point them. Keep them considered sheathed or folded when you aren't using them.
- Don't use a knife as a lever. In other words, don't use a knife to pry open a door, which can cause the tip to break off and potentially injure someone.
- Keep your knife sharpened.
- If you or person else is cut, call 911. If the wound is manageable, apply pressure to the area near the wound while elevating it (if possible) above the level of the heart.
Along with advances in knife technology come advances in knife safety. Safecutters.com represents the most modern evolution in knife safety. Knives come in all shapes and sizes, and no home or office is complete without a well-made utility knife or safety knife. Safecutters.com offers a practical and safe line of package openers and safety knives, perfect for employees working in shipping and receiving and in mail rooms, for pro and amateur movers or whatever who works with interesting boxes, whatever who sells interesting supplies or shipping supplies, and - lastly - whatever who receives packages in the mail.
The Invention of the Knife and protection Tools of Today
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