View allAll Photos Tagged flints

Home of Jesse Shirley's Etruscan Bone and Flint Mill, Etruria Industrial Museum is the last working steam powered potter’s mill in Britain. Situated at the heart of the Potteries on the junction of the Trent and Mersey and Caldon canals, it was built in 1857 to grind bone and flint for the pottery industry. Today, it is a thriving museum.

A huge mural by Senkoe, seen in Flint, Michigan. This one dates from 2019.

View of downtown Flint, and the Flint River.

this hunter gatherer was making tools from flints

Class 175 Commuter train at Flint Station Sunday Morning the next train will arrive in 2 hours! hence the number of carriages

BUCKEYE LAKE FLINT MAN?

I have identified what appears to be a worked cobble of Flint Ridge flint which strongly resembles a life-size human skull, and human facial profiles, from multiple viewing angles and distances. It stands upright on its own base (anatomically the neck) and would have made a suitable sculpture for display or ceremonial alter use. It has possible hand grips from the rear as if to animate the skull by having fine control of its movement pivoting on its base, puppet-like. I found the piece on my property at 306 Lake Shore Dr W in Hebron, Ohio, Licking Township, Licking County. When my home foundation was dug to a depth of about 6 feet, some flint blocks (flint ridge, coschocton black, cherts, etc) were found, along with other hardstone rocks, and saved for use in a rock garden, piled rising three feet up to my screened porch overlooking what was once called “buffalo swamp.” This piece has likely been sitting, exposed, since 1937, in this rock garden until I picked it up and was startled to find a face looking back at me. When it then sat perfectly balanced in the upright “statue” pose, I determined there was too much happening with this stone to leave it outside any longer. It is a flint base with a possible addition of a concrete material as filler where no flint was present, and finished in a white plaster of which there may be some residual material. The piece weighs 12.1 lbs, an anatomically correct weight for the head of an approximately 150lb human. It has discernable and dramatic eye sockets, forehead, a nose, mouth, ears, neck, fully rounded skull. It can be appreciated from every angle as you walk around the sculpture. The aesthetic of the human form is unmistakable in multiple expressions.

The artifact is so perfectly balanced on its base, I was confident enough to place it on top of a Ball canning jar and a terry washcloth as a display pedestal. AI large part of the weight of the artifact, almost ½ is weighted toward the rear of the skull which hangs. However, the slightest nudge and the weight of the entire object is thrown and it topples over.

 

Now, the business of studying this thing.

 

South Saginaw Street, across from the Fisher Body Plant

Camping at Flint Creek over Fall Break- October, 2014

Woolworths - Flint

(store 996)

13 September 2009

closed 30 December 2008

30-32 Church Street, Flint CH6 5AL

Flint from GIJOE Classified Series

Betsi Metter Flint at the AVP Manhattan Beach Open 2015.

BUCKEYE LAKE FLINT MAN?

I have identified what appears to be a worked cobble of Flint Ridge flint which strongly resembles a life-size human skull, and human facial profiles, from multiple viewing angles and distances. It stands upright on its own base (anatomically the neck) and would have made a suitable sculpture for display or ceremonial alter use. It has possible hand grips from the rear as if to animate the skull by having fine control of its movement pivoting on its base, puppet-like. I found the piece on my property at 306 Lake Shore Dr W in Hebron, Ohio, Licking Township, Licking County. When my home foundation was dug to a depth of about 6 feet, some flint blocks (flint ridge, coschocton black, cherts, etc) were found, along with other hardstone rocks, and saved for use in a rock garden, piled rising three feet up to my screened porch overlooking what was once called “buffalo swamp.” This piece has likely been sitting, exposed, since 1937, in this rock garden until I picked it up and was startled to find a face looking back at me. When it then sat perfectly balanced in the upright “statue” pose, I determined there was too much happening with this stone to leave it outside any longer. It is a flint base with a possible addition of a concrete material as filler where no flint was present, and finished in a white plaster of which there may be some residual material. The piece weighs 12.1 lbs, an anatomically correct weight for the head of an approximately 150lb human. It has discernable and dramatic eye sockets, forehead, a nose, mouth, ears, neck, fully rounded skull. It can be appreciated from every angle as you walk around the sculpture. The aesthetic of the human form is unmistakable in multiple expressions.

The artifact is so perfectly balanced on its base, I was confident enough to place it on top of a Ball canning jar and a terry washcloth as a display pedestal. AI large part of the weight of the artifact, almost ½ is weighted toward the rear of the skull which hangs. However, the slightest nudge and the weight of the entire object is thrown and it topples over.

 

Now, the business of studying this thing.

 

Flint steals a Crimson Guard Uniform and hides the body, but it sounds like some Techno Vipers might be on to him.

 

A shot from my stroy Mindbender's Plan that I sadly might never finish.

Broken flint flake knife. Shows micro flaked denticulation and usage wear on the left side.

BNSF 8435, a EMD SD70ACe, sits in the CN yard across from Bishop Airport, Flint, MI

 

GTW 4912 peaks out between the two BNSF units

Flint Rail Station

North Wales

Nikon D60 Kit Lens 18-55MM

 

View On Black

Grasses in the Flint Hills along K-177

Much of the auto industry in Flint, Michigan, has been shut down and removed, but General Motors still has an assembly plant there. (Scanned from a slide)

Bit of a homage to Simon Marsden.

Near the corner of Grand Traverse Street & West Kearsley Street, Flint, Michigan.

To read more about the Palaeolithic flints from submerged landscapes, which have been reported through the Marine Aggregate Industry Archaeological Protocol,

follow this link.

Sunday morning in Flint

 

View of downtown Flint, and the Flint River, from near the site of the razed Chevrolet Plant,('Chevy in the Hole'), May 8, 2006

Excavated from site E2867 Inchaquire, N9/N10 Kilcullen to Waterford Scheme, Contract 5.

 

Photographed by: Sara Nylund, 2009

 

Client: Kildare County Council

Funding body: National Roads Authority (NRA) with funds from the NDP and Transport 21

Flint at Salthouse

The Calgary Stampede ,Saturday, July 14, 2012.

Photo by Mike Ridewood

Flint Southwestern Academy, formerly Southwestern High School, Flint, Michigan. My old high school. Panorama made from four photos stitched together.

To read more about the Palaeolithic flints from submerged landscapes, which have been reported through the Marine Aggregate Industry Archaeological Protocol,

follow this link.

On the banks of the river Dee

Including one piece of flint c.2500 BC

1 2 ••• 14 15 17 19 20 ••• 79 80