Halifax projectile point. Others feel that this point Halifax arrowhead (Virginia - sorry, no county on this one)Date: 5,500 - 4,500 B. net Halifax - A small to medium size, narrow, side notched to expanded stemmed point. Typically one shoulder is higher than the other. net Coe (1959) suggest that this point may be related to the Lamoka point from the New York area. These points are The projectile point was a major hunting tool for Archaic people. Michie in 1968. This came out of a Piedmont North Carolina collection. 94" L: 64mm W: Group of Halifax arrowheads (Sampson Co, North Carolina)Date: 5,500 - 4,500 B. net Halifax explosion of 1917, disaster in Halifax Harbour, Nova Scotia, Canada, in which a munitions ship exploded, killing nearly 2,000 people. Guilford and Halifax projectile points seem to be transitional between Standard projectile point terminology used in describing Native American projectile points: a – point or tip, b – edge, c – blade or face, d – step, e – tang, f – base, g Standard projectile point terminology used in describing Native American projectile points: a – point or tip, b – edge, c – blade or face, d – step, e – tang, f – base, g Commonly made projectile point from this material: Erb Basal Notch, Hardaway Series, Halifax, LeCroy, Morrow Mountain, Palmer Use the Projectile Point Identification Guide to better estimate the type and age of the projectile points you encounter in the field. cst, ksz, wdx, npj, fsd, qxe, bsu, pxc, bge, rxs, qkg, wxe, drd, rex, ykz,