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  2. Neolithic flint mines of Spiennes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neolithic_flint_mines_of...

    The Mines of Spiennes cover some 100 ha (250 acres) of downland four miles south-east of the city of Mons. The site is dotted with millions of scraps of worked flint and numerous mining pits, that Neolithic settlers have gradually turned into vertical mine shafts to depths of over 10 m (33 ft). Underneath is an elaborate man-made network of ...

  3. Krzemionki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Krzemionki

    The main period of the mines' exploitation was 2500-2000 BCE. [4] Flint mining at Krzemionki began to decline beginning in 1800-1600 BCE. [4] In following centuries, the Krzemionki mining district was only sporadically visited. The village near the mines was mentioned first historically in 1509 and was owned by a man named Jakub from ...

  4. Flint mining - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flint_mining

    Flint mining is the process of extracting flint from underground. Flint mines can be as simple as a pit on the surface or an area of quarrying, or it may refer to a series of shafts and tunnels used to extract flint. Flint has been mined since the Palaeolithic, but was most common during the Neolithic.

  5. Spiennes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spiennes

    Spiennes (French pronunciation:; Walloon: Spiene) is a sub-municipality of the city of Mons located in the province of Hainaut, Wallonia, Belgium. It was a separate municipality until 1977. On 1 January 1977, it was merged into Mons. [1]

  6. Grand-Hornu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand-Hornu

    Grand-Hornu is an old industrial coal mining complex and company town (cité ouvrière) in Hornu , near Mons, in Belgium. It was built by Henri De Gorge between 1810 and 1830. It is a unique example of functional town-planning. Today it is owned by the province of Hainaut, which houses temporary exhibitions in the buildings.

  7. List of quarries in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_quarries_in_the...

    Lynch Quarry Site, North Dakota, NRHP-listed and a U.S. National Historic Landmark, a flint quarry that was "a major source of flint found at archaeological sites across North America, and it has been estimated that the material was mined there from 11,000 B.C. to A.D. 1600."

  8. Mons Porphyrites - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mons_Porphyrites

    Mons Porphyrites (today Jabal Abu Dukhkhan) is the mountainous site of a group of ancient quarries in the Red Sea Hills of the Eastern Desert in Egypt. Under the Roman Empire, they were the only known source of the purple "imperial" variety of porphyry. They were exploited between the 1st and 5th centuries AD. [1]

  9. Alphonse Briart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alphonse_Briart

    Alphonse Briart (1825–1898) was supervisor of the coal mines at Bascoup and Mariemont near Morlanwelz in the Hainaut province of Belgium, and a geologist who studied that region. During the period 1863–1896 he and Francois Cornet published a number of books and papers describing fossils and geological structures found near Mons. They ...