Tuesday, January 10, 2017

On a Snowy Back Road (Roxbury CT)

Perched Boulder on another boulder behind a row of stones that I wouldn't have noticed at a different time of year but was quite noticeable because of the snow... 
A Serpent-like Row of Stones along the spine of a big outcrop of stone behind someone's house:
The head possibly a combination of boulders and cobbles...
...snow in the shadow of the "eye" of the Stone (suspected) Serpent.
A variation of this "style" of construction, such as in this one:
A stone for an eye is a "positive eye," as below, while an empty socket is a "negative eye?"

One for Tommy Hudson - a row of stones connected to a rocky hillside that has probably never known a plow, a large triangular boulder perhaps the head of a Serpent (bottom right hand corner):


More photos:

Monday, January 09, 2017

"New England Megaliths"

Added a new blog link to the list of permanent links to the right. For short:
https://newenglandmegaliths.wordpress.com/blog/

Saturday, January 07, 2017

Tennessee Gas pipeline may ‘bulldoze’ sacred Native American sites (in Otis State Forest)

By Heather Bellow Thursday, Jan. 5, 2016
   
Heather Bellow Photo
"A stand of hemlocks in Otis State Forest in Sandisfield, which will be cleared for the proposed path of Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company’s new storage loop. Native American Tribal preservationists are concerned about the possible destruction or tampering with sacred ceremonial stone sites along the 3.8-mile pipeline path and are working with the Kinder Morgan subsidiary to identify and avoid them. But the company says there are some that it may not be able to save." 


     Note:
    At one time several years back, part of my job involved providing some "recreational driving around" therapy up in that Colebrook CT/Sandisfield MA area, often noting a great number of possible (well, obvious) features of an Indigenous Ceremonial Stone Landscape. While I'm gratified to find a corroborating second opinion (or is it a third opinion? - seems I recall photos of Peter's from up around there) that such features do occur in the area, it continues to be disturbing that “(t)he (MA) SHPO has a problem...acknowledging ceremonial stones...”

Friday, January 06, 2017

Flag Hill, Stow

It's been a few years since I went there, so I took my son for a walk. If you enter from the east, going up the ravine, a rather curious bit of wall occurs:
Joe says: "It looks like a snake". I note the niche at the upper end. We headed south, up on out of there, skirting the site uphill from us:
There are some big mounds on the sw side of the hill, down near the spring house. But I am sure they are a later, non-ceremonial effort. Some of the piles have dirt one top of them, others are relatively fresh.
Back to the stuff that is "real" [I know it, just as Matt Howe says] this reminds me of the first picture above:
You'll note the quartz.
Then on the way back out, south of the pond there, another nice site. Knew it long ago and thought "Gee I am getting good at finding rock pile sites!". As it turns out, sites are everywhere and skill is not needed to find them, just persistence.
I asked my son to go have a look down into that split rock:


Then, is this a creature with quartz on its neck?

Or is it a traditional triangular marker pile with a bit of quartz?

Tuesday, January 03, 2017

2016 Year In Review

I leave it to other authors to summarize their year. For me it was a year of mounds. So I am going to post them, month by month. I sincerely hope this makes the point that mounds, especially rectangular ones with 'hollows' are to be found everywhere expressing variations on the same theme.

January:
Hammonasset Hassanamessit:
This was the best of the year. Tall without hollow or rectangle. Maybe cuz it was on the Bllackstone not the Merrimac? I note how trails are visible from mound to mound (there were two others, not shown).

Callahan State Forest Framingham:
Long "eyebrows" - also not rectangular and without hollows. These simply appear to be features on a horizon. Not sure, it was behind an electrified fence. Similar ones across the road on "Gibbs Mountain".

Also from Callahan State Park, an old favorite:
This one is rectangular and has two hollows. A couple's grave.

February:
George's Hill, Upton:
A degenerate rectangle. Only visible because of the snow.

Warren Brook, Upton:
Another rectangle with a hollow. Lots of stuff in this area.

March:
I was pursuing this search strategy: go as close to the sky as you can get where the water still flows.  I used this for most of the year.
One of several large messy mounds from the high brook valleys of Harvard, MA
This is the conservation land between Bolton Rd and East Bare Hill Rd.

Davis Rd, Acton:
This was a "good spot" sixty feet from the road. The viewing conditions were good. This one was rectangular with a hollow.

Parker Hill, Fitchburg:
Rectangular with two hollows. Sometimes these guys get pretty decrepit. But you can see it clearly enough. Another couple, lost in time.

 April: No "mounds" this month.

May:
Gates Ln, Stow: [threatened by development]
A two part mound. Considered as one, it would be rectangular with a missing portion in the middle.

Blodgett Hill, Merrrimac NH:
Kinda rectangular, kinda with hollows. A mess. Pretty subjective.

Hopping Brook, Hopkinton [threatened by development]. A big one:
And many other wonders:
A classic mound with hollow.

Aww! Lady Slippers:
 

June:
Out by Little Wachusset, on Brown Hill, Princeton:

Kinda wanted it to be rectangular with a hollow. But it was not.
  
Sudbury State Forest, visiting old friends:
 But now I see these as not only built into an outcrop, but also holding several hollows.

July:
Mathew Howes is also concerned about Hopping Brook:
 
 That is the main "burial" behind him.

August was barren [I was on vacation too.] 

September:
Warren Brook Cons. Land, Upton [highly recommended site]:
Another messy rectangle.

October:
Concord, MA [Boaz Brown cellar hole]
A lovely triangular mound. No hollows. Across from cellar holes, this is suspicious.

North Brook, Berlin:
Rectangular with hollow.

November:
Classic Leominster State Forest:
 
And a glimpse of the old favorites on "middle" Manoosnoc:
Rectangular, with hollow(s).

Codman Hill, Harvard:
Another of the large smeared rectangles from upper brook valleys of Harvard.

Brown Rd, Harvard:
Maybe a bit of a rectangle and a bit of a double hollow. This is also from a high brook valley of Harvard, but not the same large rectangular smear that we have seen before.

Northern Gardner, Wilder Brook:
A big smear, with a hollow.

December:
Mound in high valley in Carlisle MA:
  
Same idea but from Wolf Brook, Townsend (and more overgrown):
 
  
Last field trip of the year, by invitation of Sydney Blackwell and Gail Coolidge to Harvard, MA
A large messy pile downhill west of Bolton Rd [I think I found this before.]
This is located in the same way as the one from Carlisle, just above. This is a classic small rectangle with hollow (and possibly a tail):
There were three like this (but worse off), here at the very highest point of the brooks that run down to Corn Rd, past "Above the Falls".

Then how about this outstanding, long mound, much like the Blood Hill "J" but smaller. This was behind private houses and I never could have gotten there without help.
[Gail C. in the foreground].

A great end to the year.