From: Logging and related activities in the state's wildlife
management plan have stewards of land and water asking questions
“Work has begun. On
Sunday, Rushville resident David Schewe and a group of friends took a look.
Walking an area of High Tor in the town of Italy (NY), Yates County, not far
from Conklin Gully, it was clear where loggers had been.
Concerns range from runoff polluting the lake to the use of
pesticides, and the disturbance of what some believe are historic and
culturally significant rock formations...
Schewe, a technology teacher at Marcus Whitman, said he is
not against responsible logging. But he wants the DEC to recognize — and place
off-limits to loggers — areas where he and others believe are stone structures
of historical and cultural significance.
A number of years ago, Schewe began researching and
documenting these stone piles. He has pinpointed some 300 in the region. There
is no proof, but he believes plenty of evidence suggests these structurally
impressive rock formations, which fit patterns in size and shape, were manmade
during a prehistoric period...
Local expert weighs in on stone piles:
Kurt A. Jordan is director, Cornell Institute of Archaeology
and Material Studies (CIAMS); and associate professor, Anthropology, American
Indian and Indigenous Studies at Cornell University. He writes: "There is no question that there are large numbers of
human-constructed rock piles in various areas across the Northeast; it’s quite
obvious that these are cultural features rather than 'random piles of rock.' In
most cases, the jury is still out on who constructed them. While there is
widespread local fervor for attributing them to Native Americans, we must
remember that very close to the entirety of the Northeast was farmed at one
point (there is significantly more wooded area today in the Finger Lakes region
than there was in 1880, or even 1920). Most of the rock piles are quite distant
from known Native sites. In terms of knowing that there were people out on
these landscapes, then, it is more likely that they were placed by
Euro-Americans for purposes of getting the rocks out of fields, whimsy, or
other reasons. But we shouldn’t be too quick to eliminate the possibility of
Native construction, however.
"The vast majority of rock piles are not obvious
“sites” as there is little cultural material associated with them. The origin
and timing issues are difficult to resolve because archaeologists would need to
find artifacts directly associated with the rock piles, and/or associated
charcoal that could be radiocarbon-dated. This happens very, very rarely, which
means there is no good way to determine when, or by whom, the piles were
erected. Investigating rock piles is therefore extremely low on most
archaeologists’ priority lists because the research process is extremely likely
to be frustrating and inconclusive. There are simply many, many, many more
avenues of research that are more likely to generate interesting results than
rock piles.
"There is some possibility that eventually people may
be able to tell who made the rock piles on the basis of their characteristics —
some, for example, have asserted that construction of parallel lines represents
Native construction. This type of research is not very far along and I don’t
think anything definitive has come from it as of yet.
"One other possibility that hasn’t been adequately
explored is that the rock piles are intercultural creations, resulting from a
combination of Native and settler elements unfolding over time. This avoids the
'either/or' thinking most commonly applied when discussing rock piles.
Hypothetically, I suspect this is the case for many formations."
2 comments :
Thanks for posting this. It motivated me to contact Dave whom I have not been in contact with in over 5 years ago when we were together on Brink Hill. God to see him working to raise awareness about this issue.
With someone with a focus on geomancy the mounds do not appear to be aligned with a focus on aspects of Mother Earth. But, to get a definitive conclusion I need to see them.
Nearby Hi Tor that Dave and I write about is a special place and does need to be preserved and protected. I can find some time to work on this.
peace,
madis senner
Clarks Gully Blog
NAGPRA anyone?
Post a Comment