Artifacts
Artifacts from the remnants of one of a few actual houses in Sego Ghost Town in Grand County, Utah. It lies in the narrow, winding Sego Canyon, about 8.0 km north of Thompson Springs. Formerly an important eastern Utah coal mining town, Sego was inhabited about 1910–1955. The town is accessed via the grade of the Ballard & Thompson Railroad, a spur from the Denver and Rio Grande Western built by the founders of the town to transport the coal.
I'm certainly no archaeologist, but my take on these interesting pieces is as follows. Bottom Left: shard of what looks like a plate of perhaps teacup. Bottom Right: Pretty sure this is a piece of an old Mason Jar. The glass on top of those two seems to be a bit of window glass or perhaps due to its thickness a glass serving dish/plate. The other piece seems to be what is left of a glass milk bottle.
Artifacts
Artifacts from the remnants of one of a few actual houses in Sego Ghost Town in Grand County, Utah. It lies in the narrow, winding Sego Canyon, about 8.0 km north of Thompson Springs. Formerly an important eastern Utah coal mining town, Sego was inhabited about 1910–1955. The town is accessed via the grade of the Ballard & Thompson Railroad, a spur from the Denver and Rio Grande Western built by the founders of the town to transport the coal.
I'm certainly no archaeologist, but my take on these interesting pieces is as follows. Bottom Left: shard of what looks like a plate of perhaps teacup. Bottom Right: Pretty sure this is a piece of an old Mason Jar. The glass on top of those two seems to be a bit of window glass or perhaps due to its thickness a glass serving dish/plate. The other piece seems to be what is left of a glass milk bottle.