Friday, November 05, 2010

Walks in Estabrook

These woods were made famous by Thoreau. Ceremonial features are still pretty common there. For example a rock with quartz:The lower part has been burnt.The upper part hasn't.Some nice standing stones could be natural. Except I doubt it.
Rock-on-rock twins, each shaped from a flat plate of rock:My wife holds a giant puffball at the end of one walk:

On another walk in Estabrook, I was happy to find a new rock-on-rock at the western edge of Yellow Birch Swamp
And a new rock pile! At the top of the crab apple orchard north of Hutchins Pond.
Another view:

5 comments :

  1. That is the biggest puffball I've ever seen! Nice!

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  2. You have to wonder whether Mr. Thoreau ever looked at this stuff and speculated.

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  3. He will have written about it. Someday his "Indians" book will come out and we can check.

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  4. Right--that's what he was working on!

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  5. We have found a series of rock piles in Middle Tennessee, near the AL line. Would you consider looking at some photos and giving an opinion if these are Native American or not-- or letting us call you? There is a series of piles on a hillside (mostly western). There is also a 10m circle recently found. The piles have not been mapped or anything, though there are a whole lot of them on this wooden hillside. There are some springs nearby. It is a Limestone area. Also it is about an hour from a well-known Indian site called Old Stone Fort in Manchester, TN.

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