Tuesday, December 19, 2017

Stones on the Landscape

Stones on the New England Landscape
They write about:
Sheep and Cows,
Oxen and plows
      Linear Lines of Refuse
            A few Hundred years old

Those Boulders, they say, are a common feature of Old England dry stone walls.


Stones on the Landscape of Turtle Island
I look at, write about: The Spirit Being
Of a thousand Great Serpent Legends
Protectors of the Sacred Places defined by qusukqaniyutôkanash
                       Rows of stones that enclose places
                                Some a few Thousand years old


Those Boulders, I say, are a common feature of Indigenous Ceremonial Stone Landscapes

There are variations, but to get the point across for this alternative hypothesis,
I look for examples of (more or less) flat topped triangular boulders,
Especially those with the suggestions of something much like rattlesnake eyes
Paint eyes in to bring the point to life, again and again and again...

Overlay horns for emphasis again and again and again...



Someone moved the (possible fallen) Ulunsuti, I just noticed:


Painted in Ulunsuti - maybe where it was meant to go:

      Regarding large often triangular flat topped boulders at the beginning of dry stone walls, and especially those that also have a smaller stone placed on top of that that may just correspond to the Ulunsuti/Ulun'suti, a “jewel” found on the forehead of the Great Serpent: these maybe be Great Serpent Petroforms.
     If you think about the Human presence in the Americas as a long shirt, European style stone fences or walls in the Americas are, at best, the top or Sunday button and it has a proper corresponding top or Sunday hole. You can try but you can’t fit Monday through Saturday’s buttons into that single Sunday hole...

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