A Canaanean blade is an archaeological term for a long, wide blade made out of stone or flint, predominantly found at sites in Israel and Lebanon (ancient Canaan).
They were first manufactured and used in the Neolithic Stone Age to be used as weapons such as javelins or arrowheads.
The same technology was used during the later Chalcolithic period in the production of broad sickle blade elements for harvesting of crops.
The platform, with a human or other weight standing on it, was then pulled behind an animal across a threshing floor.
[2] The forward motion of the animal paired with the downward force of weight exerted through the blades served to cut grain into small pieces.