Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Mount William Quarry. The Mount William stone axe quarry (traditionally known as Wil-im-ee moor-ing) is an Aboriginal Australian archaeological site in Central Victoria, Australia. It is located 9 kilometres (5.6 mi) northeast of Lancefield, off Powells Track, 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) north of Romsey and 78 kilometres (48 mi) from Melbourne
Pages in category "Archaeological sites in Victoria (state)" The following 16 pages are in this category, out of 16 total. ... Mount William stone axe quarry; N.
Mount William stone axe quarry in Australia. Cryptocrystalline or amorphous stone such as chert, flint, obsidian, and chalcedony, as well as other fine-grained stone material, such as rhyolite, felsite, and quartzite, were used as a source material for producing stone tools.
Riddells Road Earth Ring. Aboriginal sites of Victoria form an important record of human occupation for probably more than 40,000 years. They may be identified from archaeological remains, historical and ethnographic information or continuing oral traditions and encompass places where rituals and ceremonies were performed, occupation sites where people ate, slept and carried out their day to ...
This is an incomplete list of mines in British Columbia, ... Vancouver Island: Utah Mining: 1971–1995 Produced 1.3 million tonnes Cu, 31,000 tonnes Mo, 10.9 million ...
Durankulak lake and island ; Ezero (tell) Heraclea Sintica; Ivanovo Rock-hewn Churches; Kabyle; Kaliakra; Karanovo (tell) Kozarnika cave; Kazanlak Thracian tomb and other notable sites in the region named Valley of the Thracian Rulers: Golyama Arsenalka tomb; Griffins tomb; Helvetia tomb; Ostrusha tomb; Seutes III tomb; Shushmanets tomb
Polished stone axe Pike of Stickle on the left, from the summit cairn of Pike of Blisco.The central scree run has produced many rough-out axes. Harrison Stickle, the highest of the Langdale Pikes, in the right centre of the group Neolithic stone axe from Langdale with well preserved handle, found at Ehenside Tarn near the Cumbrian coast (now in the British Museum [a])
Wurdi Youang is the name attributed to an Aboriginal stone arrangement located off the Little River – Ripley Road at Mount Rothwell, near Little River, Victoria in Australia. [1] The site was acquired by the Indigenous Land Corporation on 14 January 2000 and transferred to the Wathaurong Aboriginal Co-operative on 17 August 2006.