Friday, September 13, 2024

Waking Up on Turtle Island (Again)

 Shadows on the Stone At Just the Right Moment


As Norman Muller once wrote, "There might be peculiar characteristics to certain boulders or cliffs that may evoke the image of an animal if seen in a certain light or at a particular angle. This is called simulacra. We may sometimes pass by something and say it looks like such-and-such animal, be it a turtle, bear, or whatever. To me, this is similar to a Rorschach test, in that everyone may see something different in a particular configuration of lines or forms, and because of this we must be careful in declaring that what we see, and what the ancients must have seen in the same boulder, must be a bear, for example. We do not know what the Indians saw in certain shapes, and if a shape evokes different responses in different people, we need to be careful what we say. If the form is very distinctive, however, as, for example, a clear turtle effigy (in Killingworth CT) that I was shown in Connecticut, we can be less hesitant in expressing our views..."



(Simulacrum is a Latin word that means "likeness," a representation or imitation of a person or a thing, like a marble statue of someone, like a wax figure in a wax museum, or a plastic apple in a bowl. A simulacrum can either be a realistic representation or a caricature with exaggerated features.)

  Another example Norman uses on this post as well as another post is of a “large glacial erratic in Rochester, VT, which from one side looks like an upraised turtle head.” 


I very much agree with Norman about that Vermont boulder - and I'll show you a stone "icon" or "simularacum" incorporated into a stone retaining wall here at home that very much resembles that much larger stone in Rochester, as well as including a photo of a snapping turtle that I lifted from somewhere:


And I'll show you a photo of the shadows and sunlight striking the stones at just the right time of day which clearly shows the tool marks of the European masonry tools used to create this quite realistic Snapping Turtle Effigy:




Norman noted the presence of a culturally stacked stone feature on the opposite side of that big stone:
(And I have to say I didn't catch the "turtle head-like" boulder in this mound before just now, very reminiscent of that Killingworth Turtle Effigy identified as such by Doug Harris in numerous places, including the National Park Service training video this image is stolen from:)

On the terrace above the effigy at my house, there is a grouping of "stone mounds" that feature many different forms of making stone turtle effigies, "Stone Prayers" perhaps the better designation. It includes the second turtle effigy (as well as the first snapping turtle effigy) I became aware in the Nonnewaug or Connecticut Cluster #3 as Dr. Curtiss Hoffman calls it in "Stone Prayers":

Going back to this boulder that young Jay photographed, I have to tell you that I have walked by it numerous times and never saw the sun and shadows highlight the eye neither on any previous visit to the remarkable place where it sits (including one with Curtiss and another with Peter and Barbara Waksman). In fact when I first saw the photo, I didn't comprehend those marks in the stone behind the head stone on the larger shell stone as an intentional simulation (from the Latin simularacum) of, what to me seem to be, the marginal scutes of an actual box turtle carapace or upper shell until yesterday morning:


Are those marks made with the "stone/bone/horn/wooden Indigenous tools" from pre contact times, or were they made with post contact European steel stone masonry tools?
  
I can answer that question very quickly: "I don't know."

Special thanks to Jay Wolkoff for capturing the image and allowing me to use it here!

Other views of this same stone have appeared on this blog before and at least for now can be found here:

Big Rhomboidal Boulder

...and a nearby possibly cup-marked boulder, possibly Anthropomorphic or Human (Spirit)-like...
that is also a remarkable Turtle Effigy in a remarkable place...




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