Just out of curiousity, after decades of plowing, how are these things 'floating' to the surface again? Is there also erosion that exposing lower layers? If not, I simply don't understand how these things keep popping up?
Just out of curiousity, after decades of plowing, how are these things 'floating' to the surface again? Is there also erosion that exposing lower layers? If not, I simply don't understand how these things keep popping up?
If you don't grow where you're planted, you'll never BLOOM - Will Rogers
Mr Silver, good question & it's not just in Belgium where old armaments are uneathed. I am unsure how accurate the location maps detailing the armament sites were back then. (Even with newer conflicts...My father found this out in Bosnia back in the 90's..no lost limbs but certainly didn't help the PTSD)
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/special_r...r_i/197406.stm
The Commonwealth Graves Commission might be able to help. They just unearthed & identified a large number of Australian soldiers and may just have had to deal with armaments. There are quite a few links on thier site that might lead you to the right info. www.cwgc.org
ponders..hmmm
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Mines are a powerful gift of death that keeps on giving no matter how hard you try to remove them. You can make the place livable and usable again but it will never be totally clear. At least not in our lifetime... Still: hug a deminer when you meet one!
I don't know if you've ever heard of "stony fields" (I don't know how people call them in English). They're pieces of land that just turn up stones to the surface every year. I was lucky not to be born on one but a girlfriend of mine was, and every spring she and her siblings had to pick up the stones that surfaced. They put the stones away, but the next year new stones reappeared. Papaver said it well. Soil is a living thing...
I live on the edge of the Ozarks and you would think I would have lots of flagstones and rocks in my yard, but not a one. What I do have, though is glass. I think I know the precise location of the burn pile in days past (my house is 113 years old), because I always find bits of glass there. But today I found a shard of ceramic with a cracked glaze on both sides. I often find pieces of milk glass, too.
Karen
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insidious ungovernable cardboard
Where I live, the people used to bury their rubbish (that's before the 1900's)... My previous house was built in 1721 and there was lots of glass and porcelain in the ground. Unfortunately we didn't find any ming vases in mint condition.![]()
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Darn..no ming vases..*sigh*But you do live in a cool area ya!