View allAll Photos Tagged jawbone

Australasian Shoveler (Anas rhynchotis) male

 

Seen at Jawbone Marine Reserve a couple of years ago.

Jawbone Flora and Fauna Reserve, Altona VIC

An impressive set of bones since the skull is about three feet long. The Bauhaus window scheme makes a nice backdrop. As usual the background is just as important in my composition as the main subject.

Seagull silhouette

Jawbone Flora & Fauna reserve

Williamstown VIC

サ [ CreDitS ] サ

GOTHCORE // ABYSSAL Mainstore // TKCL - ANIME & COMICS - (TREVOR STORE)

LEGION x TREVOR] - UNDERWORLD ROYAL SPEAR

I found a jawbone while walking a trail. It wasn't there a few days earlier. It is amazing how fast a carcass can be cleaned. There were a few other bones around so the carcass must have been dragged somewhere else. I then realized I should get off the trail as all I had was a stick and an appetizer (chihuahua) with me.

 

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tough work, all that chewing:-)

White-headed capuchin (Cebus capucinus) at Punta Leona, Costa Rica.

No post-processing done to photo, only cropped. Nikon NEF (RAW) files available. NPP Straight Photography at noPhotoShopping.com

Jawbone Reserve, Williamstown, birds & plant life

Jawbone Reserve, Williamstown, birds & plant life

Carolina wren (Thryothorus ludovicianus) perched on a jaw bone that I let the squirrels gnaw on for the minerals. I've run out of deer antlers.

an Antechinus.

Little Marsupial mouse. I found it after being hit by a car. Covered it with leaf little and checked til the flesh was gone & I could take it home to show to the kids at work (Early Childhood Centre)

The other night, I took this photo while enjoying a walk along Jawbone Walk, in the Meadows.

 

Edinburgh, Scotland

I suppose it could've been for the overcompensating challenge, as well.

Williamstown, Victoria, Australia.

29 January 2022

80 loads of Long Beach bound potash roll south through Saltdale on the former Southern Pacific Lone Pine Branch, more affectionately known as the "Jawbone".

Moraine Lake, Alberta, Canada

 

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Up at Jawbone Hill on the way to the Chapletown standby box, stopped to look at the views, got chatting to a guy with a huge camera & lens! Asked him to take the picture of me with my camera.

So when the time came to head back to base - I went back this way and saw the sunset - so stopped again!

Not often I get the chance to stop twice in the same spot.. Often get a job to dash off too!

 

Yorkshire Ambulance Service.

I work for Yorkshire Ambulance Service on the RRVs in and around the city of Sheffield in South Yorkshire.

It’s a great job and I feel very honoured to be able to help people at their point of need.

Check out the website for all sorts of info re YAS and the work we do.

www.yas.nhs.uk/OurServices/accidentandemergency.html

 

Another snowy Edinburgh shot. Jawbone walk in the Meadows yesterday morning. Starting to enjoy blue hour shots!

The Searles Local returns to Mojave behind SD45T-2 9252 and company on March 8, 1984.

I've been attempting to ID the species that once owned this jawbone.

 

No joy so far.

 

It's 1.5 inches from tip to tip, has 4 remaining teeth and looks like it once had three or four more.

 

Anybody got a guess as to what species of rodent once owned this jawbone?

in the leaves

 

Smile on Saturday - Bones

 

Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without explicit permission.

© All rights reserved

Jawbone Falls off The Riding Ford Trail, Panthertown Valley, North Carolina...My first capture this morning on a 6.4 mile hike through Panthertown Valley, including the Panthertown Valley Trail, The Devil's Elbow Trail and The Riding Ford Trail...Jawbone Falls is so unique... The Tuckasegee River streams down on the river right resembling a shoulder length of grey hair, beside the escarpment to the river left resembling a bazaar facial profile with a pronounced lower jaw and chin, thin lips and a wrinkled, protruding stubby nose...Perhaps nature's literal adaptation of a Mountain Witch or the grim and sinister "Judaculla," the troll of the Appalachian Mountains.

memento mori

old cars just chillin', perhaps waiting for the ghosts of old miners.

No post-processing done to photo, only cropped. Nikon NEF (RAW) files available. NPP Straight Photography at noPhotoShopping.com

Jawbone Reserve, Williamstown, birds & plant life

Jawbone Canyon is a geographic feature in the Mojave Desert and a Bureau of Land Management area located in Kern County, California, 20 miles (32 km) north of Mojave on CA 14. The area is a popular destination for hikers and off road vehicle enthusiasts.

 

Europeans first settled in the canyon around 1860—naming it Jawbone because its shape resembled a mandible—and the trail was used as a trade route from Keyesville into the Piute Mountains (not to be confused with the Piute Mountains of the eastern Mojave Desert). During the Kern River gold rush, several gold mines operated in the canyon; the most successful of these, the St. John mine, yielded nearly $700,000 worth of gold between 1860 and 1875. The Gwynn mine, on the Geringer Grade, ran six claims yielding a total of $770,000 worth of gold and quartz before ceasing operations in 1942. Mining continued throughout the 1940s, mainly focused on rhyolite and antimony.

 

Source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jawbone_Canyon

 

On Black

 

Jawbone Flats on the Opal Creek trail.

  

Jawbone Canyon is a geographic feature in the Mojave Desert and a Bureau of Land Management area located in Kern County, California, 20 miles (32 km) north of Mojave on CA 14. The area is a popular destination for hikers and off road vehicle enthusiasts.

 

Europeans first settled in the canyon around 1860—naming it Jawbone because its shape resembled a mandible—and the trail was used as a trade route from Keyesville into the Piute Mountains (not to be confused with the Piute Mountains of the eastern Mojave Desert). During the Kern River gold rush, several gold mines operated in the canyon; the most successful of these, the St. John mine, yielded nearly $700,000 worth of gold between 1860 and 1875. The Gwynn mine, on the Geringer Grade, ran six claims yielding a total of $770,000 worth of gold and quartz before ceasing operations in 1942. Mining continued throughout the 1940s, mainly focused on rhyolite and antimony.

 

Source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jawbone_Canyon

 

Miners arrived in this area near Mill City in 1859 and discovered gold. Other minerals were in greater supply and also found nearby, such as copper, zinc and lead. Mining camp was established in 1931 and the Shiney Rock minning company continued until 1992. The remains of an old lumber mill are nearby on the way to Jawbone Flats, and the camp is near Opal Creek on the Little North Fork of the Santiam river. Located approx. 22 miles east of Salem. Jawbone Flats gets its electricity from water sent down pipes from higher elevation into a water turbine. The tailing piles were removed many years ago in a clean up effort. Located near some of the most beautiful old growth forest in Oregon.

rabbit

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Found this on the beach in Alnmouth Northumberland! I have no idea what it belonged to, but my Sister in law is a bit wierde and had to bring it home (her home not mine lol) I do have a side view too - Those teeth are quite large! Any Ideas?

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