View allAll Photos Tagged exvavator
Swanscombe based Lancebox Group Demolition Volvo Fh coupled to a three axle Noote boon semi low loader loaded with an exvavator driving along Cornered rod Sudbury
Locating off lease and repos for construction trucks, trailers, and construction equipment, including , kobelco excavators , can be a major acquistion and dealer financing opportunity. Today’s economy is all over the place and conventional construction financing has dried up at many banks and/or lending institutions. construction owners can seek and find special financing in the secondary markets
"Marker 17 - Room 64: The Tower Kiva - The Tower Kiva, a highly important feature in pueblo life, is unique in that the builders planned an innovative support system for the high structure: cobblestone foundations were used to raise the kiva to its four-meter height and to support the tremendous weight of its two meter thick walls. Six masonry and log buttresses were also used to support the wieght of the structure. It is believe that community leaders were in charge of the ceremonies conducted inside the kivas. Rites in kivas probably required both participants and audience, and may have varied from high religious occasions to social get-togethers. Social secrets may have been passed through the generations via oral traditions. These procedures and stories need to be learned for the ceremonies to be effective. Food and ceremonial items, including an important fetish, named by researchers as the Lizard Woman Effigy, were found by exvavators in the kiva. This fetish is now on display in the salmon ruins museum. Towards the end of the secondary occupation of the pueblo, there was a devastating and lethal fire that destroyed this kiva. The roof of the structure collapsed as temperatures reached levels hot enough to fuse sand into glass. The remains of 20 individuals were found in the Kiva: sixteen children and four adults. Current research and renalysis of the remains indicate that while there was an initial fire and loss of life at the time of the kiva fire, that there was also a second, ritual burning of the remainder of the kiva. This closely timed event is consistent with events seen at other Ancestral Puebloan sites: kivas are often ritually burned as the pueblo is abandoned." ~ museum display/exhibit, Salmon Ruins, Bloomfield, New Mexico. Driving around New Mexico - Great Pacific Northwest Move 2013. Photos from Saturday, 21 September 2013. (c) 2013 - photo by Leaf McGowan, Eadaoin Bineid, Thomas Baurley, Technogypsie Productions (www.technogypsie.com/photography/). Purchase rights and/or permissions to use can be obtained at site listed here. To follow the adventure, visit www.technogypsie.com/chronicles/. To read reviews visit www.technogypsie.com/reviews/.
"Marker 17 - Room 64: The Tower Kiva - The Tower Kiva, a highly important feature in pueblo life, is unique in that the builders planned an innovative support system for the high structure: cobblestone foundations were used to raise the kiva to its four-meter height and to support the tremendous weight of its two meter thick walls. Six masonry and log buttresses were also used to support the wieght of the structure. It is believe that community leaders were in charge of the ceremonies conducted inside the kivas. Rites in kivas probably required both participants and audience, and may have varied from high religious occasions to social get-togethers. Social secrets may have been passed through the generations via oral traditions. These procedures and stories need to be learned for the ceremonies to be effective. Food and ceremonial items, including an important fetish, named by researchers as the Lizard Woman Effigy, were found by exvavators in the kiva. This fetish is now on display in the salmon ruins museum. Towards the end of the secondary occupation of the pueblo, there was a devastating and lethal fire that destroyed this kiva. The roof of the structure collapsed as temperatures reached levels hot enough to fuse sand into glass. The remains of 20 individuals were found in the Kiva: sixteen children and four adults. Current research and renalysis of the remains indicate that while there was an initial fire and loss of life at the time of the kiva fire, that there was also a second, ritual burning of the remainder of the kiva. This closely timed event is consistent with events seen at other Ancestral Puebloan sites: kivas are often ritually burned as the pueblo is abandoned." ~ museum display/exhibit, Salmon Ruins, Bloomfield, New Mexico. Driving around New Mexico - Great Pacific Northwest Move 2013. Photos from Saturday, 21 September 2013. (c) 2013 - photo by Leaf McGowan, Eadaoin Bineid, Thomas Baurley, Technogypsie Productions (www.technogypsie.com/photography/). Purchase rights and/or permissions to use can be obtained at site listed here. To follow the adventure, visit www.technogypsie.com/chronicles/. To read reviews visit www.technogypsie.com/reviews/.
"Marker 17 - Room 64: The Tower Kiva - The Tower Kiva, a highly important feature in pueblo life, is unique in that the builders planned an innovative support system for the high structure: cobblestone foundations were used to raise the kiva to its four-meter height and to support the tremendous weight of its two meter thick walls. Six masonry and log buttresses were also used to support the wieght of the structure. It is believe that community leaders were in charge of the ceremonies conducted inside the kivas. Rites in kivas probably required both participants and audience, and may have varied from high religious occasions to social get-togethers. Social secrets may have been passed through the generations via oral traditions. These procedures and stories need to be learned for the ceremonies to be effective. Food and ceremonial items, including an important fetish, named by researchers as the Lizard Woman Effigy, were found by exvavators in the kiva. This fetish is now on display in the salmon ruins museum. Towards the end of the secondary occupation of the pueblo, there was a devastating and lethal fire that destroyed this kiva. The roof of the structure collapsed as temperatures reached levels hot enough to fuse sand into glass. The remains of 20 individuals were found in the Kiva: sixteen children and four adults. Current research and renalysis of the remains indicate that while there was an initial fire and loss of life at the time of the kiva fire, that there was also a second, ritual burning of the remainder of the kiva. This closely timed event is consistent with events seen at other Ancestral Puebloan sites: kivas are often ritually burned as the pueblo is abandoned." ~ museum display/exhibit, Salmon Ruins, Bloomfield, New Mexico. Driving around New Mexico - Great Pacific Northwest Move 2013. Photos from Saturday, 21 September 2013. (c) 2013 - photo by Leaf McGowan, Eadaoin Bineid, Thomas Baurley, Technogypsie Productions (www.technogypsie.com/photography/). Purchase rights and/or permissions to use can be obtained at site listed here. To follow the adventure, visit www.technogypsie.com/chronicles/. To read reviews visit www.technogypsie.com/reviews/.
"Marker 17 - Room 64: The Tower Kiva - The Tower Kiva, a highly important feature in pueblo life, is unique in that the builders planned an innovative support system for the high structure: cobblestone foundations were used to raise the kiva to its four-meter height and to support the tremendous weight of its two meter thick walls. Six masonry and log buttresses were also used to support the wieght of the structure. It is believe that community leaders were in charge of the ceremonies conducted inside the kivas. Rites in kivas probably required both participants and audience, and may have varied from high religious occasions to social get-togethers. Social secrets may have been passed through the generations via oral traditions. These procedures and stories need to be learned for the ceremonies to be effective. Food and ceremonial items, including an important fetish, named by researchers as the Lizard Woman Effigy, were found by exvavators in the kiva. This fetish is now on display in the salmon ruins museum. Towards the end of the secondary occupation of the pueblo, there was a devastating and lethal fire that destroyed this kiva. The roof of the structure collapsed as temperatures reached levels hot enough to fuse sand into glass. The remains of 20 individuals were found in the Kiva: sixteen children and four adults. Current research and renalysis of the remains indicate that while there was an initial fire and loss of life at the time of the kiva fire, that there was also a second, ritual burning of the remainder of the kiva. This closely timed event is consistent with events seen at other Ancestral Puebloan sites: kivas are often ritually burned as the pueblo is abandoned." ~ museum display/exhibit, Salmon Ruins, Bloomfield, New Mexico. Driving around New Mexico - Great Pacific Northwest Move 2013. Photos from Saturday, 21 September 2013. (c) 2013 - photo by Leaf McGowan, Eadaoin Bineid, Thomas Baurley, Technogypsie Productions (www.technogypsie.com/photography/). Purchase rights and/or permissions to use can be obtained at site listed here. To follow the adventure, visit www.technogypsie.com/chronicles/. To read reviews visit www.technogypsie.com/reviews/.
"Marker 17 - Room 64: The Tower Kiva - The Tower Kiva, a highly important feature in pueblo life, is unique in that the builders planned an innovative support system for the high structure: cobblestone foundations were used to raise the kiva to its four-meter height and to support the tremendous weight of its two meter thick walls. Six masonry and log buttresses were also used to support the wieght of the structure. It is believe that community leaders were in charge of the ceremonies conducted inside the kivas. Rites in kivas probably required both participants and audience, and may have varied from high religious occasions to social get-togethers. Social secrets may have been passed through the generations via oral traditions. These procedures and stories need to be learned for the ceremonies to be effective. Food and ceremonial items, including an important fetish, named by researchers as the Lizard Woman Effigy, were found by exvavators in the kiva. This fetish is now on display in the salmon ruins museum. Towards the end of the secondary occupation of the pueblo, there was a devastating and lethal fire that destroyed this kiva. The roof of the structure collapsed as temperatures reached levels hot enough to fuse sand into glass. The remains of 20 individuals were found in the Kiva: sixteen children and four adults. Current research and renalysis of the remains indicate that while there was an initial fire and loss of life at the time of the kiva fire, that there was also a second, ritual burning of the remainder of the kiva. This closely timed event is consistent with events seen at other Ancestral Puebloan sites: kivas are often ritually burned as the pueblo is abandoned." ~ museum display/exhibit, Salmon Ruins, Bloomfield, New Mexico. Driving around New Mexico - Great Pacific Northwest Move 2013. Photos from Saturday, 21 September 2013. (c) 2013 - photo by Leaf McGowan, Eadaoin Bineid, Thomas Baurley, Technogypsie Productions (www.technogypsie.com/photography/). Purchase rights and/or permissions to use can be obtained at site listed here. To follow the adventure, visit www.technogypsie.com/chronicles/. To read reviews visit www.technogypsie.com/reviews/.
"Marker 17 - Room 64: The Tower Kiva - The Tower Kiva, a highly important feature in pueblo life, is unique in that the builders planned an innovative support system for the high structure: cobblestone foundations were used to raise the kiva to its four-meter height and to support the tremendous weight of its two meter thick walls. Six masonry and log buttresses were also used to support the wieght of the structure. It is believe that community leaders were in charge of the ceremonies conducted inside the kivas. Rites in kivas probably required both participants and audience, and may have varied from high religious occasions to social get-togethers. Social secrets may have been passed through the generations via oral traditions. These procedures and stories need to be learned for the ceremonies to be effective. Food and ceremonial items, including an important fetish, named by researchers as the Lizard Woman Effigy, were found by exvavators in the kiva. This fetish is now on display in the salmon ruins museum. Towards the end of the secondary occupation of the pueblo, there was a devastating and lethal fire that destroyed this kiva. The roof of the structure collapsed as temperatures reached levels hot enough to fuse sand into glass. The remains of 20 individuals were found in the Kiva: sixteen children and four adults. Current research and renalysis of the remains indicate that while there was an initial fire and loss of life at the time of the kiva fire, that there was also a second, ritual burning of the remainder of the kiva. This closely timed event is consistent with events seen at other Ancestral Puebloan sites: kivas are often ritually burned as the pueblo is abandoned." ~ museum display/exhibit, Salmon Ruins, Bloomfield, New Mexico. Driving around New Mexico - Great Pacific Northwest Move 2013. Photos from Saturday, 21 September 2013. (c) 2013 - photo by Leaf McGowan, Eadaoin Bineid, Thomas Baurley, Technogypsie Productions (www.technogypsie.com/photography/). Purchase rights and/or permissions to use can be obtained at site listed here. To follow the adventure, visit www.technogypsie.com/chronicles/. To read reviews visit www.technogypsie.com/reviews/.
"Marker 17 - Room 64: The Tower Kiva - The Tower Kiva, a highly important feature in pueblo life, is unique in that the builders planned an innovative support system for the high structure: cobblestone foundations were used to raise the kiva to its four-meter height and to support the tremendous weight of its two meter thick walls. Six masonry and log buttresses were also used to support the wieght of the structure. It is believe that community leaders were in charge of the ceremonies conducted inside the kivas. Rites in kivas probably required both participants and audience, and may have varied from high religious occasions to social get-togethers. Social secrets may have been passed through the generations via oral traditions. These procedures and stories need to be learned for the ceremonies to be effective. Food and ceremonial items, including an important fetish, named by researchers as the Lizard Woman Effigy, were found by exvavators in the kiva. This fetish is now on display in the salmon ruins museum. Towards the end of the secondary occupation of the pueblo, there was a devastating and lethal fire that destroyed this kiva. The roof of the structure collapsed as temperatures reached levels hot enough to fuse sand into glass. The remains of 20 individuals were found in the Kiva: sixteen children and four adults. Current research and renalysis of the remains indicate that while there was an initial fire and loss of life at the time of the kiva fire, that there was also a second, ritual burning of the remainder of the kiva. This closely timed event is consistent with events seen at other Ancestral Puebloan sites: kivas are often ritually burned as the pueblo is abandoned." ~ museum display/exhibit, Salmon Ruins, Bloomfield, New Mexico. Driving around New Mexico - Great Pacific Northwest Move 2013. Photos from Saturday, 21 September 2013. (c) 2013 - photo by Leaf McGowan, Eadaoin Bineid, Thomas Baurley, Technogypsie Productions (www.technogypsie.com/photography/). Purchase rights and/or permissions to use can be obtained at site listed here. To follow the adventure, visit www.technogypsie.com/chronicles/. To read reviews visit www.technogypsie.com/reviews/.
"Marker 17 - Room 64: The Tower Kiva - The Tower Kiva, a highly important feature in pueblo life, is unique in that the builders planned an innovative support system for the high structure: cobblestone foundations were used to raise the kiva to its four-meter height and to support the tremendous weight of its two meter thick walls. Six masonry and log buttresses were also used to support the wieght of the structure. It is believe that community leaders were in charge of the ceremonies conducted inside the kivas. Rites in kivas probably required both participants and audience, and may have varied from high religious occasions to social get-togethers. Social secrets may have been passed through the generations via oral traditions. These procedures and stories need to be learned for the ceremonies to be effective. Food and ceremonial items, including an important fetish, named by researchers as the Lizard Woman Effigy, were found by exvavators in the kiva. This fetish is now on display in the salmon ruins museum. Towards the end of the secondary occupation of the pueblo, there was a devastating and lethal fire that destroyed this kiva. The roof of the structure collapsed as temperatures reached levels hot enough to fuse sand into glass. The remains of 20 individuals were found in the Kiva: sixteen children and four adults. Current research and renalysis of the remains indicate that while there was an initial fire and loss of life at the time of the kiva fire, that there was also a second, ritual burning of the remainder of the kiva. This closely timed event is consistent with events seen at other Ancestral Puebloan sites: kivas are often ritually burned as the pueblo is abandoned." ~ museum display/exhibit, Salmon Ruins, Bloomfield, New Mexico. Driving around New Mexico - Great Pacific Northwest Move 2013. Photos from Saturday, 21 September 2013. (c) 2013 - photo by Leaf McGowan, Eadaoin Bineid, Thomas Baurley, Technogypsie Productions (www.technogypsie.com/photography/). Purchase rights and/or permissions to use can be obtained at site listed here. To follow the adventure, visit www.technogypsie.com/chronicles/. To read reviews visit www.technogypsie.com/reviews/.
"Marker 17 - Room 64: The Tower Kiva - The Tower Kiva, a highly important feature in pueblo life, is unique in that the builders planned an innovative support system for the high structure: cobblestone foundations were used to raise the kiva to its four-meter height and to support the tremendous weight of its two meter thick walls. Six masonry and log buttresses were also used to support the wieght of the structure. It is believe that community leaders were in charge of the ceremonies conducted inside the kivas. Rites in kivas probably required both participants and audience, and may have varied from high religious occasions to social get-togethers. Social secrets may have been passed through the generations via oral traditions. These procedures and stories need to be learned for the ceremonies to be effective. Food and ceremonial items, including an important fetish, named by researchers as the Lizard Woman Effigy, were found by exvavators in the kiva. This fetish is now on display in the salmon ruins museum. Towards the end of the secondary occupation of the pueblo, there was a devastating and lethal fire that destroyed this kiva. The roof of the structure collapsed as temperatures reached levels hot enough to fuse sand into glass. The remains of 20 individuals were found in the Kiva: sixteen children and four adults. Current research and renalysis of the remains indicate that while there was an initial fire and loss of life at the time of the kiva fire, that there was also a second, ritual burning of the remainder of the kiva. This closely timed event is consistent with events seen at other Ancestral Puebloan sites: kivas are often ritually burned as the pueblo is abandoned." ~ museum display/exhibit, Salmon Ruins, Bloomfield, New Mexico. Driving around New Mexico - Great Pacific Northwest Move 2013. Photos from Saturday, 21 September 2013. (c) 2013 - photo by Leaf McGowan, Eadaoin Bineid, Thomas Baurley, Technogypsie Productions (www.technogypsie.com/photography/). Purchase rights and/or permissions to use can be obtained at site listed here. To follow the adventure, visit www.technogypsie.com/chronicles/. To read reviews visit www.technogypsie.com/reviews/.
METSHAPE Attachments- Supplying Superior Quality Attachments at Affordable Prices.
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November 2004 bucket of Kobalco exvavator can be seen digging a drain too take away some of the water
Metshape Attachments Slab Bucket in Action!
This is the example, that our Attachments is meant for maximum Efficiency & output & it can suit in any extreme conditions.
Metshape Attachments is one of the largest Brand of Attachment Manufacturers and Exporters in world, having supplied high quality products to Europe, USA, Australia, Brazil and Africa. We cater attachments to all brands of OEMs including JCB, Volvo, Kubota, Bobcat, CASE, SANY, Takeuchi, Yanmar, CAT, Doosan, Komatsu, Hitachi, Kobelco etc. We offer attachments from 1T to 50 Ton range.
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Did you miss our amazing RE-DEFINED EXTREME DUTY Grading Bucket for wheel loaders?
* Easily visible edge from the cabin for best levelling work!
* Exchangeable front side corners where the bucket is most weared!
* Optional exchangeable cutting edge
* 2000 - 3200mm width!
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Did you miss our amazing RE-DEFINED EXTREME DUTY Grading Bucket for wheel loaders?
* Easily visible edge from the cabin for best levelling work!
* Exchangeable front side corners where the bucket is most weared!
* Optional exchangeable cutting edge
* 2000 - 3200mm width!
* HARDOX® wear plates!
* EXTREME DUTY!!
Send us an email at info@metshapeattachments.com or call us at +46 736 334 517 or +45 93 87 85 18 to get your RE-DEFINED offer today.
#metshapeattachments #earthmovingattachments #earthmovingequipment #gradingbucket #planeringsskopa #entreprenadredskap #grävmaskin #lastmaskin #wheelloader #exvavator #sweden #denmark #norway #finland #scandinavia #madeforscandinavia
Did you miss our amazing RE-DEFINED EXTREME DUTY Grading Bucket for wheel loaders?
* Easily visible edge from the cabin for best levelling work!
* Exchangeable front side corners where the bucket is most weared!
* Optional exchangeable cutting edge
* 2000 - 3200mm width!
* HARDOX® wear plates!
* EXTREME DUTY!!
Send us an email at info@metshapeattachments.com or call us at +46 736 334 517 or +45 93 87 85 18 to get your RE-DEFINED offer today.
#metshapeattachments #earthmovingattachments #earthmovingequipment #gradingbucket #planeringsskopa #entreprenadredskap #grävmaskin #lastmaskin #wheelloader #exvavator #sweden #denmark #norway #finland #scandinavia #madeforscandinavia
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