Friday, June 13, 2008
Tuesday, June 10, 2008
Also visit "Waking up on Turtle Island"
(Out here in Seattle, glad you folks are busy back east.)
Highland Boy's Blog udpated
Stonewall Jackson Lake walls - from the resort in West VA
Monday, June 09, 2008
Laurels and Bobcats - Willard Brook State Forest
I was walking down a path through this


Taking pictures of mountain laurel in lieu of small wild felines, there appeared to be two varieties, one white and one pink.
Light to no posting for the next week


Sunday, June 08, 2008
Nipsachuck back in the news - from the Associated Press
By Ray Henry
Associated Press Writer
NORTH SMITHFIELD — As a boy, John Brown remembers traveling with his family to the wooded hills in northwest Rhode Island where his fellow Narragansett Indians gathered near stone piles they believe were left by their ancient ancestors.
That belief is now at the center of a struggle between this rural town and a developer that wants to build a 122-lot subdivision on the land. The town suspects the piles are burial mounds, and has filed a lawsuit asking a judge to declare the land a historic burial ground. But the developer contends the piles are left behind by farmers or loggers, and has been pushing since 2001 to build. Little is known for certain about the hundreds of rock mounds near Nipsachuck Hill and swamp. The piles of granite, slate and quartz rocks on hilly, forested land here range from about twoto nine-feet tall. Similar mounds have been found along the Appalachian Mountains and into eastern Canada.
Historians say the land was a crossroads for several American Indian tribes in southern New England, including the Nipmuc, Narragansett and Wampanoag tribes. Two battles were fought here during the 17th-century King Philip’s War, a bloody conflict between New England’s colonists and the Wampanoag tribe and their allies. Nineteenth century maps show that American Indian families continued to live and farm in the Nipsachuck area, said Donald Gagnon, chairman of the North Smithfield Conservation Commission.
“The land was in use by Native Americans and it contained these mounds,” said archaeologist Frederick Meli, who was paid by the town to survey the site. “Whether they’re burial or ceremonial, I think they go back at least a couple of thousands of years.”
Brown, the historic preservation officer for the Narragansett tribe, said the stone mounds appear manmade and probably mark a burial or ceremonial ground common to several tribes. Narragansett Indians continued to gather here for sunrise ceremonies and other commemorations into the 1960s or 1970s, when conflicts with property owners halted the meetings, he said.
“We would meet there and discuss that it was a meeting place of our ancestors, and that we come at this time to give acknowledgment of those people that have passed,” Brown said.
Although many in this rural town of 11,000 knew that the rock piles existed, they are spread throughout private land and out of public view.
The housing development, proposed by the Narragansett Improvement Co. and two other firms, was first rejected in 2001 by town authorities because the subdivision would have leveled the hilly landscape, among other reasons. (Narragansett Improvement is not related to the Narragansett Indian Tribe.) The developers filed a second proposal in 2005 but, after a lawsuit, it was rejected by the town in April.
Michael Kelly, an attorney for the developers, would not comment in detail about the dispute, but says the town’s most recent lawsuit is a ploy to block the development.
Town officials say they just want to enforce building laws and protect burial plots. Under state law, local governments must establish a 25-foot perimeter around historic cemeteries or even suspected burial sites. If enough burial sites are identified, it could make parts of the development site off-limits for building. In addition to the stone mounds, old property deeds refer to family cemeteries within the proposed development, Gagnon said.
“I think we’ve got a pretty strong case,” he said.
Each side has hired archeologists to examine parts of the disputed land. Kelly’s clients paid a private archaeologist 9 years ago to excavate several areas on the property. Kelly would not say what was found, but he said the archaeologist determined the area was not a burial ground.
“They were probably just stones being piled as the result of timber or agricultural efforts,” Kelly said. But last year, the town hired Meli, who owns an archaeological consulting firm in North Kingstown, to conduct several walking surveys of Nipsachuck Hill and swamp. He found multiple artifacts that be believes show the site was in use by humans thousands of years before the first Europeans arrived.
He identified a triangular boulder that he thinks is a Manitou stone, an American Indian marker used to identify areas of spiritual significance. He also recovered a stone ax in the debris of one partially toppled rock pile. Elsewhere, Meli found several rock projectile points, including one that he dated back to at least 2500 B.C.
Still, none of these clues prove the mounds are burial grounds. No one is certain exactly what lies beneath the ground, but Gagnon said he thinks the court might require more excavations. The lawsuit is pending, and a Superior Court judge has not yet set a date for arguments.
Friday, June 06, 2008
Points and drills from Enfield CT, collection of Isaac Davis White
These are nice shapes although details are lost out in the picture. They are late paleo to Brewerton in shape bit I do not know these types of arrowheads.















And then this, which is from probably from Concord, where my friend's grandfather collected, a gouge above and a "celt" or chisel below:

Wednesday, June 04, 2008
A link to an article by Fred Meli - from JimP
Interesting story on Dr. Meli's blog today. Have you read it?
Small Breakout zone site, Stow MA






Catskill Park - Part 2
Standing at the edge of the rock pile and looking just to the right of the pile, the path of "green" that goes around the edge seems to be a spot where runoff flows. A stone row is on the opposite side, to the far right in this picture. But I barely noticed it compared to the size of the rock pile.


Tuesday, June 03, 2008
How do you know a rock pile is man made? By the company it keeps.
How does my eye know when a cluster of rocks is too clusered to be natural? Well I have trained my eye to recognize that degree of clustering. I could try to prove this in a statistical setting but that does not clarify the basic point: a rock pile that looks pretty random, found next to a more organized rock pile, gets the credibility of its better-formed neighbor. You look at lots of clusters of rocks, natural clusters such as when frost has broken up a larger rock, or where cobbles have accumulated somehow. And you learn that those are natural. But the exact same collection of accumulated cobbles, found next to a better rock pile would be seen as man-made.
More generally the sites can have more or less structure. Particularly when the piles are equally sized and spaced evenly within the area. Or spaced regularly in the area. The piles are not random but also the site structure is not random. Structured sites tend to be considered ceremonial.
So one bit of non-randomness builds on the next. Yes those are piles, yes this is a structured site, yes it is ceremonial. And it is much more common than you think.
Low ground piles with white rocks, in the Billerica MA woods.

It is typical to come up to a rock pile site and not quite believe it. First I saw a clustering of cobbles on the surface next to a slanted rock. Could they have slipped off? I did not believe it until I saw a next pile and then a next. The site consisted of several acres facing south and sloping gently towards a wetland. These were ground piles almost entirely covered with forest duff.






I kept going west till I crossed another brook and got into the woods rising beyond, at which point it got to be all white pine saplings and no rocks. One thing I saw on that far side before that and still next to the brook was another split wedged rock. You can see the drill marks along the edge of the split (and that is a white trillium growing next to the wedge).

After this, I did not see anything more, so I turned around. On my way back, I was cutting across through the site I found earlier and saw a few more rock-on-rocks. Then I went back across the first wetland and out.