Monday, April 29, 2013

Window glass

This is probably a piece of car window glass. Either someone was broken into or else this is left over from a recent hail storm that smashed a lot of car windows in the area. Either way, someone had a bad day. Still, it's pretty. I especially like the little fracture at upper right.


ID130004
ObjectAutomobile window glass fragment
MaterialGlass
Dimensions10mm
ProvenanceDallas, Texas
Credit LineThe Museum of Parking Lot Junk

Saturday, April 27, 2013

Pull tab


These used to be everywhere. It's one of those things kids under a certain age might not recognize now. This one was found at the remote Heart of Texas Park, near Brady, and it may have been there for decades. It has a nice feel to it. 

ID130003
ObjectPull tab
MaterialAluminum
Dimensions45mm
ProvenanceMcCulloch County, Texas
Credit LineThe Museum of Parking Lot Junk

Friday, April 26, 2013

Car light lens

There's a lot of this in parking lots, once you start looking. Most of them from someone's car backing up into someone else's. So really this is the remnant of what might have been a pretty heated exchange. Even ground down a little, it's still doing a nice job of reflecting.

ID130002
ObjectAutomobile lens fragment
MaterialPlastic
Dimensions14mm
ProvenanceDallas, Texas
Credit LineThe Museum of Parking Lot Junk

Swivel

We found this tiny piece of fishing gear embedded in a blacktop country road near Lake Limestone, Texas. It's a simple thing, and you see them everywhere around a popular fishing hole like this, but it occurs to me that a lot of technology and effort went into making it. Someone had to design the thing. It's brass, so tin and zinc had to be mined, then alloyed into brass, then shipped off somewhere to cast the little bead part, some of it stretched to make the wire. Then it had to be put together and packaged. The package is paper, plastic and ink, so petroleum had to be pumped, refined, and whatever else is done to make clear plastic sheets. The paper came from trees that were cut down, processed, pulped, milled into paper the right thickness and quality, then cut into cards and driven by someone to the swivel factory. The ink on the package, etc etc. It's a lot of effort, and it's just one tiny part of what's usually take on a fishing trip. The Tawokoni people who used to live here, long before there was a lake, weren't dependent on someone else's production to eat, and fished in the creeks using traps and arrows that they made themselves.

ID 130001
Object Fishing swivel
Material Brass
Dimensions 12mm
Provenance Limestone County, Texas
Credit Line The Museum of Parking Lot Junk

About the Museum

The Museum highlights discarded bits of technology found in parking lots, streets, and sidewalks, the more durable fragments of humanity that do not quickly dissolve with the rain.

Inspired by Hardin Jones, who kept a small travelling collection of parking lot junk in a shoe box, like a cabinet of curiosity assembled by an early naturalist.


Please enjoy your visit!