I came across some very well buried rock piles in northeastern Estabrook Woods, like this (see also here for videos):Once cleared, the piles can be seen to be more or less evenly spaced and in lines - characteristics of what I call marker piles. Here, the lower version of the picture shows where the piles are circled in red. Looking northwest:
Referring to the sketch above, this is in a shallow valley between a knoll to the west and a flat plateau to the east. A stone wall crossing the knoll on the western side is "fresh" and looks like most of the walls you see in Estabrook Woods.Interestingly, the newer wall was built along the side of a "rectangular" structure:
There was another pile, on a boulder, up here in the flat area, and I saw one other off to the side, but that is all I noticed. So here we have quite a combination of anomalies on one part of the woods: an array of rock piles, older walls, a rectangular ruin against the newer wall, and also a very nice larger mound on the flat place to the east of the site. It turns out, looking at my topo maps that this flat place is the highest point - or at least the highest field (cuz I am ignoring a nearby crag)- in this eastern part of Estabrook Woods. The mound would be visible from a long way away. Here is the "MAPNIK" view:
Note that little "peak" symbol is a crag that must be familiar to people who have walked through this part of the woods. Perhaps it is relevant to this site, as its shadow would reach to here. I guess it is worth mentioning there were low rock piles on both sides of the shallow valley, shadows from the west (the knoll? the crag?) would touch piles on the eastern side of the valley and shadows from the east (the mound?) would touch places on the western side. Anyway...Look how even the larger mound is nearly invisible from a few feet away:
1 comment :
Nice find!
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