I don't know what to make of this one. So close to the road. Nothing else like it around. It seems not ceremonial.I also remember rock piles on the bedrock outcrops:
and also remember a few rock piles scattered in the pine saplings, isolated. But I thought it would be worth going back to take a look and found one small site along that northwest facing slope at the edge of the wetland.At first I saw a single pile and thought:
this is a genuine pile but it needs to be in the context of something else. I never trust isolated rock piles. So I looked around carefully and after a moment and a few feet uphill I found another very simple rock-on-rock with a line of larger rocks leading uphill from there.
This suggested to me that a viewing position might be uphill at the termination of this line.So then as I walked around I kept in mind that I was still in places that would have been visible from that higher point on the slope. And I continued to look outward from where I found the first pile and mostly along the slope at the same level until I did find two or three more piles.

(I had to step on this one to know it is there. So I peeled back a little moss and next time it will be slightly visible. I was going to do this with another and then realized it was next to a path. The rule is: no cleaning of rock piles near a path.) I think this is a Sudbury Valley Trustees path
The piles are to the left of the path in this picture. This handlful of structures in one place on the slope is the closest I have seen to an organized site over in this conservation land. I think it is the remnant of a kind of marker pile site.
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Those are the size of the pile I found in Natick town land-- a pile I nearly passed over due to its size.
This gives me the impression there may be more-- although this area hosted a paint shop and possibly other structures in the past, I will go out this weekend and look again.
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