Day of Dirt

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Argentina
seen from Argentina
seen from China

seen from Malaysia

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia
seen from Indonesia
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Czechia

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Colombia
seen from United States
Day of Dirt
egy kis szombati salakozás
Eggendorf 2018 : 202/365
New Post has been published on Go Green Videos
New Post has been published on http://gogreenvideos.thegreeningconcept.com/saria-anderson-entwicklungshilfe-preistragerin-auf-permakultur-expedition-in-eggendorf-2/
Saria Anderson Entwicklungshilfe-Preisträgerin auf Permakultur-Expedition in Eggendorf
Seit nunmehr fünf Jahren gibt es einen Austausch in Sachen Permakultur zwischen Kleinbauern in Tansania und Oberösterreich. Ein Verbindungsglied ist die Oskar-Romero-Preisträgerin Saria Anderson aus der Mara-Region am Victoriasee in Tansania. Weiterlesen → Permakultur · Kurse · Beratung · Planung
New Post has been published on Go Green Videos
New Post has been published on http://gogreenvideos.thegreeningconcept.com/saria-anderson-entwicklungshilfe-preistragerin-auf-permakultur-expedition-in-eggendorf/
Saria Anderson Entwicklungshilfe-Preisträgerin auf Permakultur-Expedition in Eggendorf
Seit nunmehr fünf Jahren gibt es einen Austausch in Sachen Permakultur zwischen Kleinbauern in Tansania und Oberösterreich. Ein Verbindungsglied ist die Oskar-Romero-Preisträgerin Saria Anderson aus der Mara-Region am Victoriasee in Tansania. Weiterlesen → Permakultur · Kurse · Beratung · Planung
Female Figurine from Eggendorf
Circa: 4500 BC
Female Figurine from Eggendorf am Walde, Lower Austria, found during the 1930ies and displayed in the Höbarth Museum at Horn. It is dated to the early Lengyel “culture” at about 4500 BC. The figurine art of the Lengyel complex included numerous animal and human representations: standing or seated females with atrophic head, marked pubis and raised arms (adorants?). Undoubtedly the most famous preserved anthropomorphic statuette of the Lengyel Culture is the “Venus of Falkenstein”, which was painted with black and read colors. Such figurines were often found in the context of rondels and cemeteries which sometimes included animal burials as well. Similar female figurines from the Lengyel complex are known from Untermixnitz in Lower Austria, Langenzersdorf near Vienna and Střelice u Jevišovic in Southern Moravia.
via > aggsbach.de