What Is This Mysterious Thing Found While Metal Detecting And This Pot From French Colonial Times?
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- Опубликовано: 18 ноя 2023
- What Is This Mysterious Thing Found While Metal Detecting And This Pot From French Colonial Times?
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The tin box has EKC stamped on it. Eastman Kodack Co. film container.
I was going to say that. I used to buy bulk 35mm film in that kind of container and wind my camera cassettes. It's been a while, but I think its Kodak.
Yes, Eastman Kodak film container, circa 1907-1935
I concur
I'm not that old. I'm sure I was getting Kodak 35mm film in a can in the 80s. Came on a yellow spool. I think I have one of the cans around here some place. I don't know if it they went with my "Darkroom" when I sold it.
@@rogergroover4633
You beat me to it by 6 hours. I've got a couple in my photography equipment collection. I got them from the local high school when I was a student. They'd been used to hold odds and ends in the photography lab and they threw them out, along with a lot of other old equipment in the late 70's and they were decades old then. I've got some more modern ones too, from when I used to buy 35mm film in 100' bulk tins, but I don't remember those having any markings on them.
The 'grapeshot' could also be iron balls from a ball mill, used for ore separation, as Washington has many mines that have operated over the years there.
Yep, most likely mill balls in that area. Mike
Mill balls over grape shot but maybe
Last item is upside down and is a VINTAGE EASTMAN KODAK EKC FILM TIN .
❤
I agree, the iron balls are more likely from a ball mill, a large cylinder with a load of iron balls and mine ore. Rotate the cylinder and the balls crush the ore to free the minerals. Most likely gold in that area.
The area is famous for copper too, not a lot of big gold strikes in Washington state.
Plus I would assume during WWII the west coast shipyards didn't import all their steel from Pennsylvania.
The Tin Can is an Eastman Kodak Company film tin. EKC is the marking on the top.
The 3 leg bean pot is a replica. I have an 1821 cast iron. The period between 1780 and 1840 they were sand cast in multiple pieces that were assembled after casting with distinct seams
That last item is a lid from an Eastman Kodak film can.
That last item, the Tin, the pic is Upsidedown!
5:17 the South Africans still use something similar for trail cooking and call it a potjie ( sounds like “poiky” ). Three legs for cocking over embers. They can do wonders with them!
The language on the bottom of the tin spice container says, "Congratulations, fool, you've been ripped off"!
Last item: It's english but upside down. It says E K C
How is it that so many people think that any metal spheres are something for a canon ? Too many Pirate movies ? Far more likely to be balls from a ball mill (for crushing rock)
Edit ; missed the comment below re. ball mills. The pipe is identical to one I bought new in the 1980's from a Community Aid Abroad shop.
@@ashleysmith3106 I was like... water pipe???? OHHHHH RIGHT!!!!