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Mattock
View on Wikipedia| Classification | Digging tool |
|---|---|
| Related | Pickaxe |
A mattock (/ˈmætək/) is a hand tool used for digging, prying, and chopping. Similar to the pickaxe, it has a long handle and a stout head which combines either a vertical axe blade with a horizontal adze (cutter mattock), or a pick and an adze (pick mattock). A cutter mattock is similar to a Pulaski used in fighting fires. It is also commonly known in North America as a "grub axe".
Description
[edit]A mattock has a shaft, typically made of wood, which is 3–4 ft (0.9–1.2 m) long.[1] The head consists of two ends, opposite each other and separated by a central eye. A mattock head typically weighs 3–7 lb (1.4–3.2 kg).[1] The form of the head determines the kind and uses of the mattock:[2]
- A cutter mattock combines the functions of an axe and adze, with its axe blade oriented vertically and longer adze horizontally.
- A pick mattock combines the function of a pick and adze, with a pointed end opposite an adze blade.
Both are used for grubbing in hard soils and rocky terrain,[2] with the pick mattock having the advantage of a superior penetrating tool over the cutter mattock, which excels at cutting roots.
Uses
[edit]
Mattocks are "the most versatile of hand-planting tools".[3] They can be used to chop into the ground with the adze and pull the soil towards the user, opening a slit to plant into.[3] They can also be used to dig holes for planting into, and are particularly useful where there is a thick layer of matted sod.[3] The use of a mattock can be tiring because of the effort needed to drive the blade into the ground, and the amount of bending and stooping involved.[3]
The adze of a mattock is useful for digging or hoeing, especially in hard soil.[1]
Cutter mattocks (Swahili: jembe-shoka) are used in rural Africa for removing stumps from fields, including unwanted banana suckers.[4]
History
[edit]As a simple but effective tool, mattocks have a long history. Their shape was already established by the Bronze Age in Asia Minor and ancient Greece.[5] According to Sumerian mythology, the mattock was invented by the god Enlil.[6] Mattocks (Greek: μάκελλα) are the most commonly depicted tool in Byzantine manuscripts of Hesiod's Works and Days.[7]
Mattocks made from antlers first appear in the British Isles in the Late Mesolithic. They were probably used chiefly for digging, and may have been related to the rise of agriculture.[8] Mattocks made of whalebone were used for tasks including flensing – stripping blubber from the carcass of a whale – by the broch people of Scotland and by the Inuit.[9]
Etymology
[edit]The word mattock is of unclear origin; one theory traces it from Proto-Germanic, from Proto-Indo-European. There are no clear cognates in other Germanic languages, and similar words in various Celtic languages are borrowings from the English (e.g. Welsh: matog, Irish: matóg, Scottish Gaelic: màdog).[10] However, there are proposed cognates in Old High German and Middle High German, and more speculatively with words in Balto-Slavic languages, including Old Church Slavonic motyga and Lithuanian matikas,[10] and even Sanskrit. It may be cognate to or derived from the unattested Vulgar Latin matteūca, meaning club or cudgel. The New English Dictionary of 1906 interpreted mattock as a diminutive, but there is no root to derive it from, and no semantic reason for the diminutive formation.[10] Forms such as mathooke, motthook and mathook were produced by folk etymology. Although used to prepare whale blubber, which the Inuit call "mattaq", no such connection is known.
While the noun mattock is attested from Old English onwards, the transitive verb "to mattock" or "to mattock up" first appeared in the mid-17th century.[10]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c Cathy Cromell (2010). "Tools of the Trade". Composting For Dummies. For Dummies. pp. 15–28. ISBN 978-0-470-58161-2.
- ^ a b Robert C. Birkby (2006). "Tools". Lightly on the Land: the SCA Trail-building and Maintenance Manual (2nd ed.). The Mountaineers Books. pp. 75–102. ISBN 978-0-89886-848-7.
- ^ a b c d Robert D. Wray (2009). "The planting job". Christmas Trees for Pleasure and Profit (4th ed.). Rutgers University Press. pp. 75–92. ISBN 978-0-8135-4417-5.
- ^ Björn Mothander, Finn Kjærby & Kjell J. Havnevik (1989). "Types of farm implements used in Tanzania". Farm Implements for Small-scale Farmers in Tanzania. Nordic Africa Institute. pp. 22–72. ISBN 978-91-7106-290-1.
- ^ Isabelle Kelly Raubitschek (1998). "Tools". The Metal Objects (1952-1989). Volume 7 of Isthmia: Excavations by the University of Chicago, Under the Auspices of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens. American School of Classical Studies at Athens. pp. 119–130. ISBN 978-0-87661-937-7.
- ^ Hooke, S. H. (2004). Middle Eastern Mythology. Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0486435510.
- ^ Frederick M. Hocker (2004). "Tools". In George Fletcher Bass & James W. Allan (ed.). Serçe Limani: an Eleventh-century Shipwreck, Volume 2. Volume 4 of The Nautical archaeology series. Texas A&M University Press. pp. 297–328. ISBN 978-0-89096-947-2.
- ^ I. J. Thorpe (1996). "The introduction of farming to Britain and Ireland". The Origins of Agriculture in Europe. Material Cultures Series. Routledge. pp. 94–118. ISBN 978-0-415-08009-5.
- ^ Vicki Ellen Szabo (1997). "The use of whales in early Medieval Britain". In C. P. Lewis (ed.). Studies in Medieval History. Volume 9 of The Haskins Society Journal. Boydell Press. pp. 137–158. ISBN 978-0-85115-831-0.
- ^ a b c d "Mattock". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
Mattock
View on GrokipediaDesign and Components
Blade Configurations
The adze blade of a mattock consists of a flat, horizontal cutting edge specifically engineered for chopping through roots and sod, enabling efficient disruption of surface soil layers. This blade is typically 4 to 6 inches wide, providing sufficient surface area for effective leverage without excessive bulk.[8][9] In contrast, the pick blade features a sharply pointed end designed to fracture hard soil or rock, with an angled configuration that enhances leverage and allows for controlled, forceful penetration into compacted materials. This vertical orientation distinguishes it from the horizontal adze, optimizing the tool for initial breaking tasks before refinement with the adze side.[10][11] Mattocks commonly vary in blade pairing to suit different needs: the pick mattock integrates one pick blade and one adze blade for versatile breaking and digging, while the cutter mattock pairs an axe-like vertical blade with an adze for enhanced root severance alongside soil removal. These configurations ensure the tool's head remains compact yet multifunctional, with the axe blade in the cutter version offering a broader, reinforced edge for tougher organic obstructions.[10][11] Blade sharpness requirements differ based on function, with edge geometry tailored accordingly: chopping edges on adze and axe blades are typically sharpened to included angles of 30 to 40 degrees for durability in soil penetration and cuts through fibrous material, whereas pick points employ bevel angles around 20 to 35 degrees to endure impacts against rocks without chipping.[12][13] Regular maintenance sharpens these edges on the working side to preserve efficiency in varied soil conditions. Weight distribution emphasizes the blades, which generally range from 2 to 5 pounds, achieving balance that accommodates both one-handed precision work and two-handed swings for greater force in demanding applications. This design minimizes user fatigue while maximizing swing momentum through the head's forward positioning.[14][15]Handle and Materials
The handle of a mattock typically measures between 36 and 48 inches in length, providing essential leverage for applying force during operation.[16] Longer handles, such as those around 45 inches, enhance reach and mechanical advantage, allowing users to generate greater torque with less physical strain.[17] Traditional mattock handles are commonly crafted from hickory or ash wood, selected for their strength, elasticity, and ability to absorb shock from impacts.[18] These materials offer natural flexibility that reduces vibration transmission to the user's hands, promoting comfort over extended use. In contrast, modern alternatives include fiberglass handles with a solid core for enhanced durability and resistance to weathering, or steel tubing for superior longevity in demanding conditions.[19] The eye, or socket, of the mattock head is forged to accommodate the handle through tang insertion, where the handle's end is driven into the slightly tapered opening for a secure fit. To prevent loosening, a wooden or metal wedge is hammered into a slot at the top of the eye, expanding the tang against the socket walls.[20] Ergonomic designs often incorporate curved handles to improve grip and minimize fatigue by aligning with natural hand positions during swings. Some models feature D-shaped handles at the base for enhanced control and precision in targeted strikes. Overall weight balance is critical, with total tool weights ranging from 3 to 7 pounds, centered to optimize swing efficiency and reduce user exhaustion.[21] For wooden handles, regular maintenance involves applying linseed oil to the surface, which helps preserve the wood, prevent cracking, and resist moisture absorption. This treatment should be applied periodically, especially after exposure to wet conditions, to maintain structural integrity.[22]Historical Development
Ancient Origins
The earliest known mattocks were made from deer antler during the Mesolithic period in the British Isles, dating to around 5000–4000 BCE. These implements were used for digging and possibly linked to the rise of agriculture.[23] In ancient Egyptian agriculture, mattock-like hoes played a vital role from approximately 3000 BCE, as depicted in tomb art from the Old Kingdom period showing wooden-handled bronze tools used to loosen soil in preparation for the annual Nile floods. These representations, found in sites like Saqqara, illustrate laborers wielding hoes to break clods of earth after plowing, highlighting the tool's importance in the fertile Nile Valley where inundation farming demanded efficient soil preparation. Bronze versions, cast for durability, allowed for deeper penetration into the alluvial soil, supporting the intensive crop cycles that sustained Egyptian civilization.[24] The mattock's development continued in Mesopotamia and Bronze Age Europe, where bronze tools appeared around 3500 BCE to handle harder, drier soils. In Mesopotamian contexts, early bronze tools facilitated irrigation-dependent farming in the Tigris-Euphrates basin, while in Europe, similar advancements supported expanding agricultural frontiers during the Bronze Age. This metallurgical progression enhanced the tool's effectiveness for grubbing roots and excavating, adapting to diverse environmental challenges across these regions.[25] During the Bronze Age, mattock-like tools appeared in Asia Minor and ancient Greece around 3000 BCE, with recognizable shapes depicted in Egyptian artworks.[23] In early farming societies, the mattock held cultural significance, as reflected in biblical texts describing its use for land preparation; for instance, Isaiah 7:25 references hills "digged with the mattock" to evoke themes of cultivation and desolation in ancient Israelite agriculture. Such mentions underscore the tool's centrality to agrarian life in the Levant, symbolizing labor and stewardship of the land in scriptural narratives.Evolution in Modern Eras
During the late medieval period in Europe, spanning the 14th to 16th centuries, mattock designs underwent refinements that emphasized heavier iron heads to enhance durability and efficiency in feudal farming and mining operations. These changes were driven by the increasing demand for robust tools in agrarian societies, where ironworking techniques improved to produce denser heads capable of breaking tougher soils and rock. Such developments marked a transition from lighter bronze or early iron forms to more substantial implements suited to the labor-intensive practices of the era.[26] The 19th-century Industrial Revolution profoundly influenced mattock production, introducing mass manufacturing techniques like steam forging that enabled standardized sizes and greater output in Britain and America. Edge tool makers in southern England shifted from small-scale smithing to factory-based operations, incorporating steam power for forging and grinding, which reduced costs and improved consistency for tools like mattocks used in expanding agriculture and infrastructure projects. This era saw a surge in production, with American manufacturers adopting similar methods to meet the needs of frontier farming and railroad expansion.[27] In the 20th century, mattock innovations focused on material advancements, including improved steels for enhanced strength alongside synthetic handles to reduce weight and improve user comfort. These changes reflected broader trends in material science applied to hand tools. In colonial agriculture, mattocks—often termed grubbing hoes—played a key role in breaking virgin soils for crops like tobacco, with records from Virginia plantations documenting their production and repair in the 18th century. For instance, accounts from 1749–1755 detail sales of reinforced grubbing hoes at rates of 2 shillings each, highlighting their essential use in initial land clearance.[4] The manual mattock's prominence declined with the rise of mechanization in the 20th century, as tractors and powered tillers supplanted hand tools in large-scale farming, though it persisted in niche applications like archaeology. Mattocks continued to be used in archaeological excavations throughout the 20th century for precision work where non-mechanical tools were required to avoid damaging artifacts. This endurance underscores the mattock's adaptability in specialized, low-impact contexts amid broader agricultural automation.Practical Applications
Agricultural and Gardening Uses
The mattock serves as a primary tool for breaking compacted soil and removing roots, facilitating the preparation of planting beds and small plowed plots in agricultural and gardening contexts.[28] Its robust design enables gardeners and farmers to loosen hard-packed earth where shovels or forks may fail, particularly in establishing new vegetable patches or orchard rows by shattering sod and extracting obstructive root systems.[29] This makes it indispensable for initial site preparation, allowing for deeper soil incorporation of amendments like compost to enhance fertility.[30] Key techniques involve employing the adze blade to skim and cut through surface sod layers, while the pick end penetrates for trenching and deeper excavation, suiting tasks in vegetable gardens or orchards where precise furrows are needed for irrigation or planting.[28] In practice, users swing the tool to fracture soil clumps before raking or tilling, promoting even bed formation without excessive disturbance to surrounding areas.[31] These methods are especially effective in clay or rocky soils, where the mattock's leverage and cutting action outperform lighter tools, enabling efficient clearing of small areas that machinery cannot access.[31] In organic farming, the mattock supports chemical-free weed control by mechanically uprooting persistent plants and their root networks, reducing competition for crops without herbicides.[29] It also aids soil aeration in confined spaces, such as row middles or sloped orchards, by breaking up compacted layers to improve water infiltration and root growth.[30] Adaptations for raised beds include using the tool to loosen underlying native soil before filling with imported mixes, ensuring stability and drainage in elevated structures.[28] Safety considerations in agricultural settings emphasize controlled swings to avoid overstriking near established crops, which could damage stems or fruits; users should maintain a firm grip with fitted gloves and limit overhead motions to prevent strain or accidental impacts.[28]Construction and Demolition Roles
In construction projects, the mattock serves as a vital handheld tool for trenching tasks associated with foundations, utilities, and drainage systems. The pick end effectively breaks through gravel, rocks, and compacted soil to initiate the excavation, while the adze blade chops and removes debris, roots, and loose material to shape the trench. This dual functionality makes it particularly suitable for narrow, deep cuts required in utility installations or foundation footings, where precision is needed without heavy machinery.[32][33] For demolition applications, the mattock is employed in small-scale renovations to dismantle old concrete footings and asphalt patches. Workers insert the pick into existing cracks or weakened areas to fracture and separate concrete slabs, followed by using the adze to pry and lift fragments for removal. This method is efficient for targeted breakdown in confined urban or residential sites, minimizing the need for powered equipment.[34] Within construction crews, the mattock integrates seamlessly with complementary tools like shovels during excavation of pits and trenches. It loosens hard or compacted earth, after which shovels efficiently scoop and transport the displaced material, streamlining the workflow in team-based operations. This pairing enhances productivity in earth-moving tasks.[35] The mattock's portability and lack of reliance on fuel or electricity make it a preferred choice for remote or pre-mechanized construction sites, including 21st-century off-grid building projects where access to heavy equipment is limited. Durability is a key attribute, with high-quality models featuring heat-treated steel heads tested to exceed U.S. federal standards for striking tools, ensuring reliability over extended use. In urban demolition settings, modern safety protocols mandate personal protective equipment (PPE) such as hard hats, safety glasses or goggles to guard against flying debris, heavy-duty gloves, and steel-toed boots to mitigate risks from impacts and sharp fragments.[36][37][38]Terminology and Cultural Context
Etymological Roots
The term "mattock" originates from Old English mattuc (also spelled meottoc or mettoc), with the earliest attestations dating to around 900–1000 CE, denoting a tool for digging and grubbing soil.[1] This form likely derives from Proto-West Germanic mattjuk, a compound of Proto-Germanic matją ("mattock" or "hoe," related to cutting or reaping actions) and the instrumental suffix -uk, evoking a "beating" or "striking" implement akin to a club.[39] Scholars connect this Germanic root to broader Indo-European terms for tools that loosen or break earth, emphasizing its function as a heavy, broad-ended device.[40] The word shows ties to Latin mateola (or Vulgar Latin matteūca), a diminutive form referring to a hoe-like club or mallet used for digging, suggesting possible early borrowing or parallel development across Indo-European languages.[41] This Latin connection appears in cognates like Polish motyka ("hoe") and Russian мотыга ("mattock"), reinforcing the tool's ancient association with soil-working implements.[42] While some etymologists propose influences from pre-Roman substrates, such as potential Celtic elements, the primary lineage remains Germanic with Latin parallels, without direct evidence for composite origins like "mat" (good) + "toc" (strike).[43] By Middle English (circa 1100–1500 CE), the term evolved to mattok or matok, appearing in 14th-century literature as a farming tool for chopping roots and tilling land. In 16th-century English dictionaries, like those compiling post-medieval terminology, "mattock" was clearly distinguished from "pickaxe" (pikax or pickas), the latter derived from Old French picois (a pointed breaking tool), highlighting the mattock's broader, adze-like blade versus the pickaxe's spike.[44] Regional variants emerged, such as Scottish "maddock" (a phonetic shift retaining the core meaning), influenced by dialectal pronunciation in northern Britain.[43] The Norman Conquest of 1066 introduced French agricultural terms via trade and conquest, but "mattock" preserved its Old English Germanic core, with minimal direct alteration, as evidenced by its consistent form in post-Conquest texts.[45] This resilience underscores the word's deep roots in Anglo-Saxon tool nomenclature, even amid broader linguistic shifts.[46]Symbolism and References in Culture
In the Bible, the mattock serves as a symbol of laborious effort amid desolation and divine judgment. In Isaiah 7:25, the prophet describes hills that "shall be digged with the mattock" yet abandoned to briers and thorns out of fear, illustrating the ruin of fertile land following invasion and unfaithfulness, where even intensive cultivation cannot restore prosperity. This imagery underscores themes of spiritual and physical barrenness, with the tool representing futile human toil in the face of inevitable decay. Matthew Henry's commentary interprets the verse as portraying a land surrendered to wild overgrowth, emphasizing the mattock's role in evoking widespread abandonment and the consequences of moral lapse.[47][48] In folklore and Gothic literature, the mattock embodies death, excavation of the past, and encounters with the uncanny, often linked to grave digging and the violation of burial sites. Robert Blair's 1743 poem The Grave, a seminal work prefiguring Gothic sensibilities, depicts the gravedigger wielding a mattock to "dig through whole rows of kindred dust," symbolizing the relentless cycle of mortality and the intrusion into sacred earth, which influenced later explorations of horror and the supernatural in 19th-century fiction. Bram Stoker's Dracula (1897) further reinforces this association, with the ominous "muffled sound as of mattock and spade" heard at night, evoking grave robbery and vampiric resurrection, thereby heightening the novel's atmosphere of dread and the macabre. Such references position the mattock as an emblem of humanity's uneasy confrontation with decay and the unknown.[49] The mattock also carries symbolic weight in modern cultural depictions, representing industriousness, resilience, and a deep bond with the land. In J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings, mattocks are wielded by Dwarves both as mining tools and battle weapons, as seen in the Battle of Azanulbizar where Náin's mattock splinters against an orc, symbolizing the Dwarves' unyielding craftsmanship and subterranean heritage amid epic struggle. In American cultural narratives, the tool evokes the pioneer spirit of the 19th-century frontier, embodying the grueling manual labor of clearing wilderness for settlement; historical artifacts, such as cutter mattocks from Southern plantations, highlight its role in uprooting stumps and roots to transform untamed land into homesteads, reinforcing myths of self-reliance and national expansion. These portrayals underscore the mattock's enduring iconography as a marker of human endurance against nature's harshness.[50]References
- https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/mattuc
- https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/mateola