The western side of the hill was steep and I did see a low stone row that I think probably was a ceremonial structure:
Mt. Wachusett lies roughly in that direction.This is about rock piles and stone mound sites in New England. A balance is needed between keeping them secret and making them public. Also arrowheads, stone tools and other surface archaeology.
The western side of the hill was steep and I did see a low stone row that I think probably was a ceremonial structure:
Mt. Wachusett lies roughly in that direction.
I looked for steel drill holes but did not see them. Still the regularly spaced indentations along the upper edge suggest that some kind of harder tool was used to at least get the split started.
What would the Gage's say about that?
I was surprised at how much "new" unexplored territory there was along there. Deeper in and downhill there was a breakout zone with a single large rock marking the start of the water, with a pile on the rock:
And there was a little knoll down in there with a wall crossing it. At the high point was a break in the wall and someone had borrowed some rocks from the wall to make this small structure:
I think I now recognize this. It is a small prayer seat enclosure, that has been stoppered with a single round stone in the middle. One speculates that closing the "U" was done after the seat was used. The flat plat, on the right in the photo above, is also a common feature. There is good evidence of "U" shaped prayer seats, some with very high enclosing walls (especially ones we see from out west (like this) and there must have been a reason for such high barriers around the supposed seated person (see also comment here from the Wolbach Farm in Sudbury). Here in Estabrook woods, it is a humbler affair. The view outward would have been through the gap in the wall.
By the way, the gap in the wall seems unlikely to have been to accommodate vehicles, since it leads directly down into the swamp and there was no trail through the gap.

My dad always thought it was ceremonial because it was too brittle to use, but I think it could also have been a knife.
Then after my fall I spotted a rock pile and...away we go. I photo'd this little combination:
Had I not just last night been blogging about "elongated triangles" I would not have noticed that the upper rock in the picture is the same triangular shape. Maybe I am just imaging that this is significant.
The near pile had a very interesting and distinct feature (and not something I saw in Sterling). It had a vertical "fin".
(Further away)
I see these finned rock piles occasionally. I am remembering one I saw at the Conant Land in Carlisle a while ago, also at a wetland's edge.

Most of the piles, unlike these visible ones, were so low and covered with dead leaves that you had to step on them before you noticed them. I started a bit west of the northernmost edge of the wetland but worked my way around to the eastern side, and stopped seeing piles. But I continued southward on the eastern side of that swamp (hey how about a map fragment?)
After not seeing much I did see one quite different type of rock pile: a larger oval mound, completely buried, perhaps ten feet long:
A trail and a couple of long boardwalks took me back across to the western side of the swamp, then north and back to my car where (not atypically) the police were waiting to snarl at me about where I parked.
This lovely example was at the place where a smaller tributary of Rocky Brook meets the main flow out from Hy-Crest pond. It was placed a few feet in front of and in line with the split of a large split rock. I am sorry I did not photo the relationship. It was the only thing I noticed in this area which was mostly low wetland. I had pushed onwards to get to the confluence.
Walking a few yards down towards the edge of a wetland area I saw a few more and then a distinct grouping, which I was quite taken with.
A closer view:
I tried to make a video clip of this and posted it the other day here. Looking along the wetland edge it is hard to ignore that the piles are lined up along the edge:
Well not exactly, but they sure are clustered along the edge. Here is the view back in the other direction:
Walking back up hill slightly, here is where a spring rises up and contributes to the water. Look at the split rocks:
Note the rock-on-rock is shaped like an elongated triangle. A few feet away, this other rock-on-rock shaped like an elongated triangle:
It looks like some kind of animal head. Two rocks in this shape near each other suggests a deliberate reason. Walking slightly further up hill a few more yards from the wetland edge and only a few feet from the road (Justice Hill Rd) were a couple of slightly larger piles:
and more rock-on-rocks:
Back to my car. My little fantasy is that saying a prayer or performing a ceremony for the water happened over and over again here. The piles are not layed out in any overriding architecture but follow the contours of the land and the water.
The flat boulder near the bottom, but not on the bottom, makes up the entire base. There are also trailing rocks to the right. My flash was going off, so the picture doesn't do justice to the fact that the large, flat boulder has a perched look to it.



Right there at the break in the wall, notice the stone to the right? Here is a close up:
Is it me, or does it look similar (yet smaller) to these stones?