Where you'll find me this weekend. These are the "near" hills. There is another set further north.Update: Yup. Alpine Hill, in the center. Stay tuned.
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.
It might be damaged but I cannot see why the wall would be borrowed from in different places with a rock pile in between.
Further up hill there was a continuation of wall - more substantial and taking a few zigs and zags leading up to the summit and the small site with quartz from the (other) other day.
A couple of turns off Ashburnham Hill Rd in Fitchburg takes you to the end of Scott Rd where it turns into a dirt road. I walked in from there and stayed to the south, straying downhill to a place a bit north of the "O" in "Overlook". Here I saw a curious disturbance:
Take a closer look at this structure to the right:
It got worse, downhill from there, behind the parking lot for the Audubon Soc. "Flat Rock" parking lot. Things got really confusing.
About in the position of the second "e" is in the word "Reservoir", I saw on obviously non-random cluster of rocks poking up on the surface:
The piles were big, damaged, covered with thick debris. So the pictures are not great. I have several pictures of the large irregular shaped pile:
Here, from a slightly different angle, there is a feel of several large structures with sides oriented in the same directions, giving a sense of parallel walls:
Here it the large mound incorporated into the wall. From the side:
From above, looking west:
The relatively flat hilltop had been the scene of some camping, deer hunting, ongoing disturbance. Either in the past, or more recently, someone has tamped down the soil along the wall.
We are looking back (south) towards the large mound in the wall. Here is a closeup of one of the two:
I have nothing new to say about this type of site. Personally, it is a great pleasure to poke along through thick underbrush, without great expectations, and nevertheless stumble into yet another mound builder site up in the Fitchburg Hills. These sites are so cool and so hidden.