Above: Slide from Power Point Presentation by Timothy H.
Ives
“A Brief Social History of Stone Heaps” Apr 23, 2021 https://youtu.be/rQV05I4N6O8
Just for the record: My first name is Tim, not Timothy.
Just for the record: I was a NEARA member for one year
although I wrote up some guest pieces for the online magazine.
https://wakinguponturtleisland.blogspot.com/2007/01/indian-cave.html
Just for the record: That “Indian Cave” may be an example of a stone sweat lodge rather than a hypothesized sheep barn since “Indians did not build with stone until taught to do so by European settler colonists” - in this part of the world, anyway.
https://wakinguponturtleisland.blogspot.com/2011/12/indian-cave.html
Just for the record: One of those stone features in Pennsylvania mentioned in “Stone Rows and Boulders; a Comparative Study” by Norman Muller
{ https://rock-piles.com/stonerows.pdf } dead link in 2022
(Muller, Norman E. “Stone Rows and Boulders: A Comparative Study,” New England Antiquities Research. 7. Association, 1999 Traditional Cultural Places - October 27, 2022
https://parkplanning.nps.gov › showFile )
has a “preliminary” date of 500 BCE attached to it:
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0197693120920492
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