View allAll Photos Tagged toothpicks
It depends of kind of organism you are...trees could be a whole universe, a toothpick or a toilet paper.
HMM. Today’s theme for MacroMondays is “stick”.
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I think you can see why I called this young buck "Toothpicks". He took his place in the hierarchy of males, followed and learned from the big boys. I imagine he'll look quite different this coming season.
A mundane object that we use every day, at any moment.
Macro Mondays: "Toothpicks"
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The toothpick is known in all cultures and is the oldest instrument for cleaning teeth. Hominin remains from Georgia, believed to be around 1.8 million years old, indicate the repeated use of a toothpick.
For at least 130,000 years, humans have been aware of the importance of oral hygiene.
Neanderthal teeth were found in a Croatian cave showing signs of repeated toothpick insertion.
Archaeologists found no traces of prehistoric toothpicks, but suspect that people back then brushed their teeth with pointed pieces of bone.
historianet.nl/maatschappij/dagelijks-leven/hoe-hielden-o...
What you see is a row of toothpick tips standing close together and protruding into a delicate blue. The toothpicks have been dipped in green paint, so that their narrow tips look like a small, abstract forest or a stylized skyline.
Grape and cheese bites on a toothpick, photographed through a water droplet on a toothpick
Trauben-Käse-Happen auf einem Zahnstocher, fotografieret durch einen Wassertropfen, der an einem Zahnstocher hängt
Dave's Dad made this years ago when they wintered in Arizona. Coyote toothpick holder.
Crazy Tuesday. Made of Wood.