via Norman Muller:
http://theconversation.com/old-stone-walls-record-the-changing-location-of-magnetic-north-112827
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.
I was hoping the author would be exploring the record within a single stone wall of the rocks being moved and subject to different magnetic directions over the wall's lifetime.
ReplyDeleteNOAA has a computer model that can determine magnetic declination in 10 years intervals from 1750 to present for any given longitude / latitude. It is extremely useful for laying our old boundaries from deeds an surveys in GIS software. (i.e. changing the magnetic bearings to true north bearings)
ReplyDeletehttps://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/geomag/calculators/magcalc.shtml#ushistoric
There's a lot more to a row of stones that how it's been recorded for the last 300 years. "What if it begins with something that resembles a snake's head??"
ReplyDeleteThere are two serious problems with this account. First, the author simply assumes (as do many professional archaeologists) that Native Americans never built stone walls, either before or after European contact, a proposition that can now be considered disconfirmed. Thus, as Tim points out, a wall which appears on a 300-year old map may be much older than that.
ReplyDeleteSecond, there is a peculiar statement to the effect that magnetic declination changes by about 1 degree per decade in New England. This seems extreme - maybe he meant 1 minute? In any event, compare this figure with his calculation that the declination changed by 6.6 degrees over the past 250 years! DOES NOT COMPUTE!!!