As I look, I find more patterns. There is a five sided point pattern. There is a round bottom point pattern. There are the obvious curving sides, whale tail base points. There are some notched points, but few. There is an entire group of triangular points with straight sides.
There were a lot of single sided pieces that had humps on the back of the curved side, and the convex side was left unworked, or was not worked back towards straight at all. After spending enough time to recognize the pattern, and some magnification, they are not points at all, and likely were never intended to be points at all. The hump is to make them strong, and the ends of every single one of them has been sharpened to make them cut when dragged towards you. I assume the pointed end was to use a handle with them. The dark point with the convex base in the picture, is not a point at all. It is a scraper for scraping things like arrow shafts.
Interesting discovery.
There were a collection of points that appeared to misshapen and ill formed. Wrong again. They are every single one, a cutting blade or knife blade. Again, once the pattern becomes apparent, it is easy to see. Several of them have flats on them that appear to be designed to allow some kind of handle that gripped from the sides. A couple are just rough and sharpened on one side, with minimal work elsewhere. The majority fit the same pattern as the bigger hand knives, and they are obviously sharpened for the use of the blade edge. There are as many blades as there are just about any single kind of point.