Tuesday, February 24, 2009

FFC finds a snake effigy - Carlisle Town Forest

We went to explore a part of Carlisle Town Forest where we hadn't been. Around the "T" in "Town Forest" there was a place where, at first glance, some rocks had fallen off of the nearby stone wall:FFC noticed that these rocks formed a pattern with a head formed by a ring at one end (near his feet in the next picture) and a tail that snaked away from the head (towards the camera).I went to take a closer look at the ring and I have to admit, it looked quite deliberately made.

7 comments :

Norman said...

Fascinating! These stones should be mapped precisely using a grid, as this would make your argument more convincing.

pwax said...

It is not my argument. But I will suggest this.

theseventhgeneration said...

I think the snow helps enhance the image, although maybe that's just me. It also looks, to me, like some of those rocks are too far away from the wall to have fallen off.

Anonymous said...

i wonder. anything that close to a wall is very supicious/ or achaeology damaged. You have to wonder why the stone wall builders never used those nearby rocks just to add to the wall since they were there for the taking.
Keith

pwax said...

Keith: looking at the height of the wall I think it is fairly clear the stones were borrowed from the wall and, if this structure is deliberate, it was built more recently than the wall.

Anonymous said...

good point. It's amazing that something so commonly made within the last 100/150 yrs or so and we have so little (to none) information about why these piles were made.
keith

Norman said...

After the snow melts, someone should determine just how deeply the stones are buried in the soil. From what I've heard, bioturbation rates are about one inch per century. So if the stones are deeply buried, then one should reconsider whether the possible snake petroform is recent or ancient.