Monday, March 07, 2011

Spring by Boulders with Stones

On the way back home from my ramble up the steep hill to the out crop and that zigzag I posted just the other day, I happened to notice that a spring that I had not noticed before had melted out of the snow cover and was now trying to flow (toward the basement of my neighbor John's house probably).
A little bit of map and a not to scale and probably inaccurate drawing (ah! I'll give it a rough field sketch designation!) that might give you the feel at least of how this sort of looks. Those of you with photographic memories will say: "Hey! You posted about this in March 2008!" There should be a dot below the red line of the highway and to the left of the dashed line of the power lines to show where the boulders and stones are...
Anyone detect any signs of possible human enhancement on this stone also featured back in '08?
Travel back in time by clicking here: http://wakinguponturtleisland.blogspot.com/2008/03/by-highway-by-power-lines.html 

Sunday, March 06, 2011

You can walk on the snow now

A short stretch of wall comes down from the left and a sequence of rock piles lie between it and a brook. The brook starts here at a spring.
You can walk on the snow now but my legs have grown weak from inactivity. I went out to see this site I know. There are also a couple of larger mounds here but I was only able to see one of them in the snow.It has two hollows - "double chambered". This site in Callahan St. Forest is one of the further east examples of this kind of mound.

The Wee Folk under the Cairn

Rob Buchanan passes along this link [click here]

First new rock pile of the year

At one spot on Rt 93 south, just before Concord St:You can see this right next to the highway.

Some Stone Rows Along an Outcrop

The rest of the photos here: Out-Crop with Zigzag [ http://wakinguponturtleisland.blogspot.com/2011/03/out-crop-with-zigzag.html]



Friday, March 04, 2011

Zawi Hawass resigns

[Not rock pile related]
Head of Eygptian Antiquities Zawi Hawass has long overshadowed research in Eygpt with a convential wisdom, preventing even simple non-destructive testing if it conflicted with his views. Good riddance. [
Click here]

Overlook Mountain site in the news

Theseventhgeneration writes:

There is an article in a Hudson Valley paper (Daily Freeman) today about the Overlook Mountain site. Here is the link: http://www.dailyfreeman.com/articles/2011/03/03/life/doc4d6d718618484399435368.txt?viewmode=default

Thursday, March 03, 2011

Mayan Greenstone axe heads

[Not rock pile related]. I cannot resist posting this picture. At one point there was talk of some of the greenstone coming from Vermont - but we never heard any corroboration.

Wednesday, March 02, 2011

Aaah....rock piles!

I have a new commute that takes me up a stretch of interstate 93 and the day before the snow came and shut down the season, I thought I spotted a rock pile next to the road. All winter I have been glancing at that spot as I pass and wondering if there was a rock pile underneath a certain white bump. Well, it finally melted out and I could see it was a bare rock. But today I examined an adjacent bump and, sure enough, rock pile is starting to show. Great!

This re-enforces the idea that rock piles are common. I mean - really - there is still a lot of snow on the ground and it is a short stretch of highway overall.
If you travel Rt 93 south towards Boston and feel like trying to spot this rock pile, it is on the right side just past the sign to exit on Concord Rd. There is an "Adopt a Highway" sign and immediately after that you pass an older farm building on the right. Between the "Adopt a Highway" and the building there is a rock pile. Maybe I will bring a camera to work and stop briefly in the breakdown lane on the way home.

Tuesday, March 01, 2011

What I miss

Foraging through old blogs, found this picture from Leominster:It reminds me of one of the main reasons for going out: the piles are so beautiful in their context.

Tradition or folly?

Reader Chris writes:
Your recent blog post showing a "prayer seat"-type structure that was not old [see here - pwax] reminded me of this little thing I found in the Franklin State Forest. It is near a hilltop in a treeline facing a big clearing where power lines cut through the woods. I looked at the rocks carefully and there was no charcoal or any indication there had been a fire there. There were pine needles and leaves under the rocks, they have not been there long. The last picture gives some sense of the setting. I have entertained the thought that it is a recent Indian thing but suppose it could have been put together by anyone for any number of reasons.

Monday, February 28, 2011

The first rock pile site acknowledged by the Indians

In Carlisle MA the Indians came and looked at stone piles and agreed that the piles were their own ceremonial objects. There had been a "medicine man" trail that passed somewhere nearby but no one remembered the details, no one remembered where it was. So this property, given to the town of Carlisle by Mr Benfield, became the first acknowledged Native American ceremonial site in the northeastern US. In one description "the cat was out of the bag". This led to other things such as USET resolutions and the listing of the Turner's Falls airport rock pile site as a national historic landmark. It is fair to say that I first noticed the rock piles at this site and pointed them out to FFC who started making a fuss about such things and got the Indians to visit.

Here is a link to an article in the Carlisle "Mosquito" about the property. Other articles from that newspaper can be found by searching on words like "Indian" and "stone pile" here.

The site is at the edge of the woods, with a wide opening to the right where a marsh edges Spencer brook:
Saturday FFC invited me for a stroll out to the Benfield property, where the Carlisle Trail Committee is building a platform out in the middle of the marsh surrounding Spencer Brook. I got some nice photos of the place from Louise Hara - a friend of my friend. So I thought I would show them.

One of the abutting landowners, Tim Fohl, spent a good deal of time looking around at the rock pile site and noticing stone walls and their relation to the brook. I believe he has done some research into old channels and earthworks within the Spencer Brook marsh and there may be other thoughts, but one result of his interest was a focus on the brook itself and the wide expanse of sky visible there. This might have contributed to what they are doing today. The trail committee asked the Native Americans (in this case probably the Narragansett historic preservation officer) about building a platform and were told to avoid using straight lines or corners. So (looking in the opposite directions from were the first picture above was taken) here is a view of the brook and the trail leading to the platform they are building:Here are the assembled trail committee, getting reading to start work:Here they make an oval:Here are a couple of friends, pwax on the left, FFC on the right - pretty well pleased with themselves.

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Friday, February 25, 2011

Templeton Site: 10,000 year old secrets revealed

LHAC Lecture Series presents "The Templeton Site: 10,000 year old secrets revealed"
Saturday, March 13th 3:00 pm

The Templeton Site, 6LF21, located in Washington Depot was excavated by IAIS (formerly the American Indian Archaeology Institute) more than 30 years ago. At the time it was the oldest dated human camp site in New England (10,190 years ago). This was an undisturbed, deeply buried, single occupation camp with evidence of woodworking, hunting, hide working, bone working, food preparation, and tool manufacturing. This one site destroyed the stereotype of Paleo-Indian camp placement, environment, lithic procurement strategies and selection, and long term site preservation. Presented by Dr. Roger Moeller, former Director of Research of IAIS and author of “6LF21: A Paleo-Indian Site in Western Connecticut (available for purchase in our gift shop).
Fee: $5 General Public; Litchfield Hills Archaeology Club members Free

Museum Building at the Institute for American Indian Studies
38 Curtis Road
Washington, CT 06793
Tel. (860) 868-0518

Roger lives up the road from me and also wrote: “Stone Walls, Stone Lines, and Supposed Indian Graves,” about a site in Granby CT quite a while ago before I met him. I wonder if photos exist of these...

I got to it from here: http://www.connarchaeology.org/html/tocs.html
which has lots of interesting things like:



Stone Heaps and On Going Traditions

Contemporary Archaeology in Theory: The New Pragmatism By Robert W. Preucel

Confronting colonialism: The Mahican and Schaghticoke peoples and us (Russell G. Handsman and Trudie Lamb Richmond).


Page 486
Image captured from Google Books

Historic contact; Indian people and colonists in today's northeastern United States in the sixteenth through eighteenth centuries

By Robert Steven Grumet
(Stockbridge is on the Housatonic as well)


 

Ongoing Tradition or Idle Folly?

Reader Rob writes:

I was exploring an old Indian trail last Fall in Waterboro Maine to see what I could find when I came across this structure. Judging from how the moss was absent on the tops of some of the rocks used in the structure, I believe that this was recently built. Your discussion on possible ongoing traditions brought this to mind. I myself think that perhaps a hunter or logger built this to fill in some idle time.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Paintings

To keep off the dull times lately, I've been looking at paintings that might include zigzag stone fences in the stage of being formed gradually and haphazardly as field clearing stones are "thrown up" against wooden rail fences, just like it says in all those stone wall books, from Eric Sloane in the middle of the last century to Professor Robert Thorson in the begining of the present century.
 Click these two to see more:

http://wakinguponturtleisland.blogspot.com/2011/02/cracking-nuts-1856.html

http://wakinguponturtleisland.blogspot.com/2011/02/w-s-mount.html

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Check out the links

If you haven't done it lately, check the links to the right. They are doing a better job than me finding stuff to blog about, while we wait for the snow to go away.

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Good News for the New Jersey Lenape

Just saw this posted somewhere: Legislation to have New Jersey officially recognize the Nanticoke Lenni Lenape Indians, Ramapough Lenape Indians and Powhatan Renape Indians as American Indian Tribes was approved Thursday by the Assembly.

It goes on to say that the bill "would allow the three tribes to establish eligibility for federal education, job training and housing benefits and protection for the sale of artwork, qualify for public and private grants, protect the ability to engage in traditional religious practices, preserve and protect burial sites and artifacts and ensuring that handicrafts made by tribal members may be sold as “Indian made.” Could be a very good thing. Maybe someday, Pennsylvania?

Friday, February 18, 2011

Just a thought

It may be that in order to understand rock piles one needs to understand the political situation of modern Native Americans.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Haydenville MA rock piles

Reader Chris writes:

I didn't find any great rock piles in 2010, though it wasn't because I wasn't out looking. I uploaded some new photos to my site today of some not-too-impressive rock piles I spotted in Haydenville, MA on some hills near old fields. I suspect that they may be field clearing piles though there were a couple of subtle features that left me wondering. The link for the pictures is http://stoneruins.cellarwalls.com/#43.0 What do you think?

Monday, February 14, 2011

The "Inclined Cairn" at Oley Hills

Norman Muller writes:
Attached is a photo of the Inclined
Cairn at the Oley Hills site, showing the four cobbles of quartz, three of which are nearly on a horizontal line.

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Friday, February 11, 2011

Burnt woods and buried walls

by theseventhgeneration
Here are some links to old writings. The first is "A tour of four great rivers...the journal of Richard Smith" by Francis W. Halsey. It contains two references to burning.
Page 64

page 72

The second is from "History of Pittsburgh and environs" by George Thornton Fleming
page 19

Incidentally, Thomas Ashe "Travels in America" looks like fine reading as well.

Next are two different writings about some strange, ancient stone walls. First is from "American architect and architecture, Volume 11"
page 48

Second is "A New and Popular Pictorial Description of the United States" by John A. Lee & Co.
page 583

Stone and Snow


Boulder in the distance above, the crop below, at the Hamburger Edge of Watertown CT, photo taken by the entrance to the Grocery Store as the sun was setting.

Snow-less views from the other side of the fence:
&
&


"The Prophecy of the Fourth Crow"


I'd never heard this story until yesterday when I found it, reading an old magazine in a doctor's office. As I looked for an image to add to my post, I found this one that looks to me to be a turtle with the wings of a crow...
via

Wednesday, February 09, 2011

One end of another formed stone pile at the Longswamp site

Here's a passage from the talk James Mavor gave at a NEARA meeting October 31, 1998, after Mark Strohmeyer's death. Found it interesting reading and thought some of you might, too.

"... I want to convey something of the way that Mark thought, worked and wrote about the New England stonework, by quoting one of his letters to me. Under the date of April 2, 1995, he wrote,

'And then in your booklet (Mavor, A Line of Stones to the Sun [which I also have a copy of, with Mark's notes]), you present the compelling statement - "If the stonework is conceived as native American, we have an opportunity to participate in a sacred landscape and to learn the respect for it that is universally traditional among native Americans." These are beautiful and strong words and it is an experience I have witnessed as I speak about the stonework. People who live in the communities where these stones make the landscape vibrate, innately sense the meaning of the stonework and are very moved by its presence. Hearing and learning about the stonework require that you reexamine the land and your environment in which you have lived all your life and come to see it in a different way and - in many cases for the first time - come to understand how you are eternally connected to aspects of it. In the towns of Carlisle, Actone, and Concord, Massachusetts, where I have spoken, people have been consistently overwhelmed by the experience of redefining their world - and thus themselves - through the way the native Americans understood the same land they live on.

'I have found that the critical breakthrough point for people is when they come to accept that these sites are not dead; they are not buried only to be recovered by a different people one thousand years later. When I speak about how the native people are still using these sites today for the same purposes they were originally placed, I often hear gasps coming from the audience. But I continue to reinforce there is noting to fear; that they should welcome this information - that this is for them, too, if they want to see it and participate in it. The power of the stonework's meaning begins to come clear when it is realized that its continued use and maintenance has transcended thousands of years - including fairly recent genocide, disease, war and poverty - surviving and thriving through a system of oral tradition. When the inevitable question comes up - how old are these rows and mounds?, I answer, "14 thousand years old - as well as one day old." Meaning that whenever the stones were placed, they came from an ancient concept of the natural world which is revived each day they are seen.' "

I enjoy his phrase, "in the communities where the stones make the landscape vibrate".

Monday, February 07, 2011

Another Museum Recognizes Stone Piles (and something fun to poke around on online)

Formed rock pile at the Longswamp site

Yesterday I visited the new Sigal Museum in Easton, Pennsylvania, at the suggestion of Fred Werkheiser. I was pleased to find an excellent full-room exhibit on the Lenape that included a photo of the above structure from what we've been calling the Oley Hills Site. On the sign about "sacred sites" they call it the Longswamp site, which locates it more accurately.

In the ten years since I was introduced to the rock piles and their mystique, things have certainly come a long way! There was even a CD, containing a power point presentation on the sites, for sale in the museum gift shop. I couldn't get it just then, but I hope to soon.

In connection with something else, I've been going through old papers from 2001, and I came across an email (That was back when I used to print out emails I wanted to keep. Wise, as it turns out.) I was copied in on, in which it is suggested that people interested in this topic should browse the reports of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian. In particular the 1890-1891 issue is said to be relevant.

These are now online, as perhaps some of you may know. For those who don't, it's something to peruse should we get another storm or something else that allows you time for fiddling. The email recommends pages 690 to 701, but I imagine there's more to be found. Anyway, here's a link to the introduction of that year. You can use the table of contents to move around. Just click on the page number. Enjoy!

P.S.: I couldn't access the link that Norman Muller gives in the comments, but he has excellent articles on the Oley Hills/Longswamp site here and here.

Friday, February 04, 2011

Yuriakh site in Russia.

Really early stone tools here. This includes Oldowan-style pebble choppers, core and blade technology, and some monofacial tools.

Soothing sites of summer

I strongly recommend heading over to Larry's blog and watching his virtual field trips. A nice antidote to being snowbound.

Wednesday, February 02, 2011

Harrumph!

I have been noticing a complete absence of tracks. Finally forced the birds to show themselves today by tossing out more and more birdseed. Anyway, nobody is going out in this stuff.

Hubbard's Hill Chamber

Rounding out the set of 3 chambers in Concord [that I know of], here is the one on Hubbard's Hill.
It took me about 10 years of looking for these chambers before I found/got access to them all. I heard there is another possible one built in a wall somewhere near the Emerson cellar hole in Estabrook woods.

Monday, January 31, 2011

YouTube videos

(scraping the internet bucket)
rock pile: click here.

stone head click here [reminds me of the ones we were seeing a couple of years ago showing up in various places in New England] click here.

NW CT

Entrance of a "Leatherman Cave" near Prospect Mtn. in Litchfield County CT. The Leatherman in later years did not regularly visit this cave, my sister explains, but in the early days a photo was taken of him here. The Leatherman used rockshelter sites about a days walk from each other as he walked from the Hudson River to the Connecticut River...

Friday, January 28, 2011

One Way Split Wedged Boulders Happen

Ted Hendrickson writes:
We were walking in the Groton, CT woods last month and came upon a interesting phenomenon. I saw a large erratic that had a split, so went to investigate for any wedged rocks. I was surprised to capture this natural process.
A small sapling had started growing in a crack on the right boulder, very near the split. The root system had recently gotten big enough to split away a chunk of rock into the opening, probably with the help of the recent freezing temperatures. The rock's natural faults are vertical, a you can see.From above you can see the root mat that forced the opening and allowed the water penetration and freeze expansion to take place.
This certainly does not explain many other examples that clearly look intentional, but it was interesting to see this very clear evidence of a natural mechanism at work.

Stone Rows in CT Record Snow

Morning sun and a record amount of snow on the ground...


Boulders along side of the row...

...it looks like this under the snow.



Mound works in Syria


Dave C writes: "Tim,
I ran across this complex of mound works in Syria while Google Earthing. Thought you might be interested."
Link: http://maps.google.com/maps?ie=UTF8&hl=en&t=f&ecpose=32.66661072,36.10349654,1872.19,6.251,0,0&ll=32.666611,36.103497&spn=0.0042,0.012757&z=17


I find it most interesting, looking down on another Ancient Sacred Landscape being covered over by the modern cultural landscape. I see no turtles, but as I widen the view, I see smudges that were also more mounds, more pieces of the picture brushed away, and wonder what was there where the houses are, much like I do in my own neighborhood...

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Poll

"For a few weeks until July 24, 2010, the poll question on RockArtBlog was Do You Believe That Secrecy Protects Rock Art Sites, Or Is The Broadest Transparency And Education Possible More Effective? The answer choices are listed below along with their votes.


Open and effective education and site stewardship provide the best protection. 4 votes, 44.44%

Plant poison ivy and fertilize regularly. 3 votes, 33.33%
Controlled access limited to acknowledged researchers and scholars. 1 vote, 11.11%
Keep it totally secret - do not let anyone (including vandals) know where it is. 1 vote, 11.11%..."
Peter Faris, RockArtBlog

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

More snow....more no rock piles

I cannot figure out what drives readership up and down here. I think it is mostly what traffic Google sends my way and think it might be a function of how much new material gets posted here. But that cannot be it. For some reason I have lots of readers at the moment (based on the SiteMeter logs accessible at the bottom of the page) but not much has gotten posted.

Lost my old computer with lots of unpublished photos, so that is out. Also this is a good time for me to be snowed in, because the new job is getting a lot of mind share.

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Tales of the Colorado pioneers

by theseventhgeneration
Tales of the Colorado pioneers, By Alice Polk Hill (1884). The author writes, in the Preface, "I solemnly avow that the tales herein related are - 'told as they were told to me!' If I have succeeded in reviving some pleasant recollection for the 'old timer,' beguiling the weary traveler or interesting the general reader, my aspirations have, in a measure, been reached. If I have betrayed confidence or told anything that I ought not to have told - I will graciously accept all apologies ."

Starting half way down page 276:
"The greatest evidence of the former Indian occupants was in the lower part of the country, through which the deer in great numbers pass every spring and fall. There was a V-shaped fence of stone, each arm of the V being a stone fence fully fifteen miles long; the V opening towards the mountains from which the deer came, and the point of the V, instead of being closed, was open for the deer to pass, and in cunningly dug holes would be seated the Indians to kill them. The fence, which had been built entirely by the squaws, was to turn the deer all to this one point, and though it was merely a succession of stone piles, anything that has the appearance of having been made by man is as effectual a barrier to deer as the tallest fence.

Another cunning device of the Indians is seen wherever there are rocks; when they see a rock about the size of a man's body, they place another about the size of a man's head on top. It is done to accustom the deer to such objects, so that an Indian sitting behind a stone with his head in full view, is not likely to frighten them."

The story immediately following (about a "bear") is funny, but not quite as riveting as the Poplar Science article about humans with tails!

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

More web surfing: Georgia Outdoor News members discuss rock piles

A long comment thread with some photos, this is worth a read.

searching the web so you don't have to

This is interesting...weird mounds near Mt Shasta [click here] from author Brad Olsen.

Susan Creek Indian Mounds

Did you ever hear of these? They are in Oregon. I was reading this and then searched on "Susan Creek Indian Mounds" and found a photo here and here.

Cochegan Rock video

"Rock man?"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S3Y9NhS4Y0E

Monday, January 17, 2011

Popular Science

by theseventhgeneration
One hundred twenty years ago they were just as interested in glacial erratics as we are today.

The first is Popular Science Monthly, Volume 37. The article, entitled "Evidences of Glacial Action in Southeastern Connecticut" By Hon David A. Wells, starts on page 196.

The second article is Popular Science, January, 1892. The article, "Remarkable Bowlders" by David A. Wells is on page 340.

Both articles contain excellent photos.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Snow no rock piles

You know the drill. With the heavy snowfall it will be several weeks before rocks start to poke through. Until then, we'll have to read archives.

Saturday, January 15, 2011

Fifth birthday of this blog

I never realized, when I started this, that there would be such a continuous stream of information about rock piles. Here's to the new year and hoping its as revealing as the last.

Friday, January 14, 2011

Geopsych - Nature Photos from Geophile

Not rock pile related but some beautiful photos here.