Near the town of Hubbell, along M-26 in the Keweenaw Peninsula, are massive concrete blocks. They look like something from an ancient civilization, but the mechanical device on one of them shows they are more modern. They are the remnants of the Ahmeek Stamping Mill. It was built in 1910 and pulverized rock into a sand-like material for copper extraction. The mill closed down in the 1940s, and the concrete structures remain as a reminder of the Copper Country’s past.
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