Forwarded from Crayonic Exostencilism
How to boost the immune system:
Unrefrigerated summer sausage on the desk with a box cutter
Unrefrigerated summer sausage on the desk with a box cutter
Forwarded from Potassium Nitrate Pilled (Cardiac Jimbles)
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Forwarded from Wakingup1984
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Blackrock and stakeholder capitalism: They just want to “do the right thing.”
Forwarded from Insider Paper
BREAKING: Austria approves mandatory Covid vaccination, becomes first country to do it in Europe.
More: https://cutt.ly/VIA0LCZ
Follow @insiderpaper
More: https://cutt.ly/VIA0LCZ
Follow @insiderpaper
Forwarded from Wild World of Control 👻👽💀💩
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Forwarded from PEST CONTROL (AGATHODAIMON)
Created: Tagar Culture. 6th-5th century BC.
Found: Southern Siberia, Krasnoyarsk Territory, north of Minusinsk.
The bronze dagger characteristic of Tagar culture weapons comes from the collection of the well-known Turcologist V.V. Radlov who carried out the excavations of barrows at the site of the Khakassko-Minusinsk Basin in 1863 and also acquired antiquities from locals. Unfortunately, the inventories of Radlov's collections do not provide information regarding the finds’ precise place and circumstances. The only thing known about the dagger is that it was found to the north of Minusinsk. The finial of the handle is decorated with two large heads of a bird of prey with their beaks facing each other, and on both sides of the intersection are two stylized prowling wolves with their tails between the legs. The motifs and form of the dagger date it to the 6th - 5th centuries BC, the time when the range of images used in Scytho-Siberian art began to expand and Tagar art acquired certain dynamism.
Found: Southern Siberia, Krasnoyarsk Territory, north of Minusinsk.
The bronze dagger characteristic of Tagar culture weapons comes from the collection of the well-known Turcologist V.V. Radlov who carried out the excavations of barrows at the site of the Khakassko-Minusinsk Basin in 1863 and also acquired antiquities from locals. Unfortunately, the inventories of Radlov's collections do not provide information regarding the finds’ precise place and circumstances. The only thing known about the dagger is that it was found to the north of Minusinsk. The finial of the handle is decorated with two large heads of a bird of prey with their beaks facing each other, and on both sides of the intersection are two stylized prowling wolves with their tails between the legs. The motifs and form of the dagger date it to the 6th - 5th centuries BC, the time when the range of images used in Scytho-Siberian art began to expand and Tagar art acquired certain dynamism.
Forwarded from Evil Buildings