'Every pebble is full of ghosts' is a photographic exploration of the web of relations and the sensual qualities of more than-human as carriers of construed meanings. The disappearance of biological organisms that formed flint stones with a naturally occurring hole, also known as hag stones, and the loss of fossil folklore associated with their magical properties as witch repellents, guardians against nightmares and illness, protectors of property, humans and cattle, combine to evoke a submerged apparition akin to a Victorian séance – a liminal space haunted by the ghosts of our past. Flick on the light and the magic is gone.