A non-invasive procedure allows obtaining archaeological information without excavating (phys.org)
Monday, May 31, 2021
Wednesday, May 19, 2021
Land Protectors Win One for Nayyag - Ancient Native Site Rescued
Nohham Cachat-Schilling writes:
“MassDOT has determined that the best next step is to terminate the current construction contract and undertake a re-evaluation of the project design. The re-evaluation option is responsive to the nature of the public comments received, which asked MassDOT to consider alternatives that avoided the location of the archaeological site,” the notice said. “This re-evaluation will take public opposition into account as a key evaluation criterion for all design alternatives considered.”
Friday, May 14, 2021
Whaddya Think?
Found on an island, wrong material but this looks like the base of a Merrimack (Stark) point:
scalloped edges:Wednesday, May 05, 2021
Oley Hill site dates to 2500 years ago
I asked Norman Muller about his dating result for the Oley Hills. They used OSL (Optically Stimulated Luminescence) to arrive at a date of 2500 BP, for one of the terraces at Oley Hills. He wrote:
Yes, the Oley site is much older than Cahokia. I am of the opinion that the large platform stone mounds in the Northeast were inspired by the earthen mounds in the Midwest. Or maybe the influence went in the other direction! You are aware, of course, of that large geometric earthen mound in western MA (see LiDAR attachment; the mound is about 50 feet high and 200 feet long at the base; the top is precisely oriented to the cardinal directions. I visited the site with Timreck and Lisa Gannon).
Sunday, May 02, 2021
Ontario Mounds
Reader Joanne writes:
Mike Martin's Cave
A reader writes:
Rock Piles contributors, especially Jimp:
Thursday, April 29, 2021
Curt Hoffman Talk
Dr. Curtiss Hoffman will present a talk on stone structures to the archaeology club at Norwalk Community College, via Google Meets, at 7:30 PM this evening, April 29th. The log-in code is https://meet.google.com/bpu-
Old Sugar Shack Snake Effigy (Woodbury CT)
A stone wall-like roadside Snake Effigy, hiding in plain sight:
Wednesday, April 28, 2021
Nobscot Park
Curt Hoffman writes:
Sometimes, you can discover these sites without having looked for them. Yesterday, I was looking for a way around the construction on Edgell Road and Water St./Edwards Rd. in Framingham, MA to get to a destination, and I happened to notice on GoogleMaps the notation "Rock Pile" within the bounds of Nobscot Park, a small parkland maintained by the Framingham Garden Club. We checked it out, and there doesn't seem to be very much there, but I did note 2 rock piles associated with stone rows and a third unassociated stone row at the approximate locations on the map denoted by "rp" and "sr" respectively. There was no signage in the park except for a few Garden Club signs and memorials, and the stone monuments were rather far from the "improved" grassy area of the park -- I have no idea what the GoogleMaps citation was referencing.
Monday, April 26, 2021
Johannes (Jannie) Loubser - talk on Georgia Rock Art
Norman Muller writes:
A fascinating, well organized, and finely illustrated talk on rock art in Georgia and neighboring states by Johannes (Jannie) Loubser.
Friday, April 23, 2021
Secrecy
By Norman Muller:
I agree with your essay on openness versus secrecy regarding
rock pile sites, which you posted on your blog on April 13. While I am reluctant to publish the exact
location of certain sites, particularly those that are fragile and vulnerable
to damage, I believe that we can best preserve rock pile sites by describing
them and their connection to the past – our past -- and through education,
since keeping everything quiet or secret does nothing except to perpetuate ignorance.
And with education, we might well start with the historical commissions in the Northeastern states, some of which are either reluctant to accept the fact that there are Native American rock pile sites in our midst, or openly hostile even to their existence, such as the view of the Massachusetts Historical Commission, which continues to claim they are simply colonial in age. Such resistance to reality does not promote the preservation of rock pile sites, but rather subverts it through ignorance, eventually leading to their damage and destruction.
Tuesday, April 20, 2021
"Cairns" in Prince Edward County, Ontario
Read Ken D writes:
Hi, I thought you might be interested in my find at the back of my property in Prince Edward County - Ameliasburg. To the east of us is a Mohawk Indian reserve so I instinctively thought the 8 cairns on my property were burial sites. I found your blog 'Reflections' interesting indeed.
Ken indicates that he is willing to show them to someone interested. Contact this blog for email introductions.
Tuesday, April 13, 2021
Sad Destruction
Keith from Mendon writes [I am adding some text at the bottom]:
Just want to send you a few pictures of Quissett Wildlife Management Area I know you once visited in Blackstone/Mendon. I just discovered this the other day while I was hiking. Apparently a huge chunk near the middle of Quissett is private property. They are clearing countless acres for solar panels. I know there were many rock piles in this area. Find out people are using their landlocked property and selling to the solar companies. Obviously this is very counter productive to saving the planet by going solar and reducing CO emissions but destroying beautiful forests! Sad. This just ruins this wildlife area!
***
Thursday, April 08, 2021
Track Rock Gap Vandalized
Norman Muller writes:
Depressing news about an important petroglyph site in NW Georgia. I've been there, and I assume that Jannie Loubser will be involved in analyzing the damage, since he wrote an important article about the site.
Tuesday, April 06, 2021
Google woes
Some people, including me, are having trouble getting to this blog when searching from Google Chrome or MS Edge. Search terms like "rock piles" or "rock piles blog" are getting spotty results, where the blog used to come out at the top or at least on the first page of search results.
I have been trying to get Google or MS tech support to tell me what is going on.. Anyone want to weigh in on whether it works for them or not?
Update: Yay! It is back, at least for me. If it is still not working for you, please let me know.
Tuesday, March 30, 2021
Stop calling them "cairns"
Cairn - Gaelic for heap of stones.
Is a more contemptuous designation even possible? It kind of suggests heap of stone built by a Scott or Irishman.
Are Native Americans supposed to use that term?
Update: I realize that a lot of people use "cairn" to mean a well built stack of rocks; and the term is not being used out of contempt. Nevertheless I think we should move away from it. The Gaelic connotation is just a bad fit for something built by non-Gaels. Especially when we are trying to refute their Gaelic origin.
Monday, March 29, 2021
Sunday, March 28, 2021
A John Martin photo (Southeastern PA)
Wednesday, March 24, 2021
Curt Hoffman to talk at Amherst
Friday at noon, join the Zoom meeting:
The Zoom link is https://us02web.zoom.us/j/
Sunday, March 14, 2021
Housatonic Watershed (Western MA)
A photo by Michael Loglisci: