Ancient Stone Mysteries of New England
Ancient Stone Mysteries of New England
  • Видео 115
  • Просмотров 131 233
Ancient Stone Mysteries of New England - Feature Focus: The Champlain Thrust Fault in Burlington, VT
A Natural Geologic Wonder to ponder on this installment in Stone Site Researcher Mike Luoma's series of short videos focused on individual features of interest. Though the only Ancient Mystery here, perhaps, is whether or not the striking Champlain Thrust Fault was of any significance to the ancient Indigenous of the area. Mike believes it likely may have been, given its remarkable appearance, and given some possible, though unconventional, stonework nearby (perhaps to be seen in a future installment).
See the Thrust Fault as it's situated on the peninsula, then head down to the shore in front of the Fault for an up-close look at its unique geology: the "hanging wall", orange and tan Lower...
Просмотров: 153

Видео

Ancient Stone Mysteries of New England - Feature Focus: Vermont's Secret Tunnel Stone Chamber
Просмотров 913День назад
Some stone sites can only be shared via video because of the secrecy involved in preserving their locations... This installment in Stone Site Researcher Mike Luoma's new series of short video presentations on individual stoneworks looks at a Tunnel Stone Chamber of Unknown Origin in a Secret Location in Northwestern Vermont. Join Mike and climb up and through this unique Tunnel Stone Chamber to...
Ancient Stone Mysteries of New England - Feature Focus: Nashoba Brook Stone Prayers in Acton, MA
Просмотров 156День назад
This entry in Stone Site Investigator Mike Luoma's series of short video presentations on individual stonework features of interest is a quasi-sequel to the last one, as it moves on from the Stone Chamber on the "Trail Through Time" in Acton, Massachusetts to the Indigenous Stone Prayers found there. Check out this cultural trail site and some of these preserved and protected Stone Prayers, and...
Ancient Stone Mysteries of New England - Feature Focus: The Nashoba Brook Stone Chamber in Acton, MA
Просмотров 15614 дней назад
Focusing in on a Stone Chamber in Acton, Massachusetts in the latest in Stone Site Investigator Mike Luoma's new series of short video presentations on individual stonework features of interest. This restored Stone Chamber, on Acton's "Trail Through Time," could be of Indigenous Origin, though the restorer believes otherwise. This chamber has a unique "L" shaped interior, as you can see if you ...
Ancient Stone Mysteries of New England - Feature Focus: A Face? Zink Boulder in Bolton Massachusetts
Просмотров 19821 день назад
We're biologically wired to see faces in inanimate objects, a phenomenon called "pareidolia". But it's nearly impossible *not* to see a face emerging from The Zink Boulder, a glacial erratic found in Bolton, Massachusetts. See for yourself, in this installment in Stone Site Investigator Mike Luoma's new series of short video presentations focusing in on individual stonework features of interest...
Ancient Stone Mysteries of New England - Feature Focus: A Central Massachusetts Stone Chamber
Просмотров 16428 дней назад
This current entry in Stone Site Investigator Mike Luoma's new series of short video presentations focusing in on individual stonework features of interest takes a look at a Stone Chamber of Unknown Origin in Central Massachusetts. Join Mike and step inside this Central Massachusetts Stone Chamber to determine... is it ancient, Indigenous work? In these "Ancient Stone Mysteries of New England -...
Ancient Stone Mysteries of New England - Feature Focus: An Indigenous Boulder & Stone Assemblage...
Просмотров 26828 дней назад
A coalition of conservationists, townspeople, researchers, and tribal authorities, came together to save 14 Acres of Indigenous Stonework at "Manitou Hassannash Preserve" in Hopkinton, Rhode Island. Join Stone Site Investigator Mike Luoma at the site as he focuses in on an Indigenous Boulder & Stone Assemblage which dating suggests could be about 500 years old! Mike Luoma's new offering in his ...
Ancient Stone Mysteries of New England - Feature Focus: Redemption Rock
Просмотров 387Месяц назад
Redemption Rock is a relic from a war that people have never heard of - or have forgotten. The bloodiest war ever fought on this soil! This new entry in Stone Site Investigator Mike Luoma's series of short presentations focused in on individual features of interest turns to the forgotten history behind Princeton, Massachusetts' Redemption Rock, where Indigenous forces returned a colonial captiv...
Ancient Stone Mysteries of New England - Feature Focus: The Calendar Two Stone Chamber
Просмотров 214Месяц назад
The latest entry in Stone Site Investigator Mike Luoma's series of short presentations focused in on individual stonework features of interest takes a look at a mysterious Stone Chamber in Southern Vermont. Join Mike and head inside The Calendar Two Stone Chamber - which could be an ancient, Indigenous work - in the Woodstock, Vermont area. In these "Ancient Stone Mysteries of New England - Fea...
Ancient Stone Mysteries of New England - Feature Focus: The Calendar One Stone Chamber
Просмотров 2,3 тыс.Месяц назад
Stone Site Investigator Mike Luoma presents an entry in his occasional series of short presentations focused in on individual features of interest. This time around, join Mike for a look at The Calendar One Stone Chamber, which could be ancient, and may be an Indigenous stone chamber, in the Royalton, Vermont area. In an "Ancient Stone Mysteries of New England - Feature Focus", Mike gives you a...
Ancient Stone Mysteries of New England - Feature Focus: The Upton Stone Chamber
Просмотров 673Месяц назад
Stone Site Investigator Mike Luoma presents another in an occasional series of short video presentations focused on individual features of interest. In this installment, join Mike for a look at The Upton Stone Chamber, an ancient and possibly Indigenous stone chamber in Upton, Massachusetts In an "Ancient Stone Mysteries of New England - Feature Focus", Mike gives you a look at stonework and re...
Ancient Stone Mysteries of New England - Feature Focus: "The Oven" at Raven Ridge
Просмотров 541Месяц назад
Stone Site Investigator Mike Luoma presents the first in an occasional series of short video presentations focused on individual features of interest. In this installment, join Mike for a look at "The Oven" at Raven Ridge in Monkton, Vermont - a natural stone feature known as an "Anticline". The new "Ancient Stone Mysteries of New England - Feature Focus" lets Mike give you a look at stonework ...
Experiencing Subtle Stone Structures, Possible Effigies, and "Twin" Stone Assemblages Revisited...
Просмотров 322Месяц назад
Join Stone Site Investigator Mike Luoma as he ventures back into the Jericho, Vermont woods to discover a new field of cairn-like stone structures and more, near the site of stone assemblages he's shared in two previous video presentations on this area, "Experiencing Cairn-Like Stone Constructs, Odd-Shaped Erratics, and More in Jericho, Vermont" (ruclips.net/video/PsUWaBOoGFo/видео.htmlsi=JJKe7...
Ancient Stone Mysteries Of New England: "Yankee Lore"
Просмотров 39 тыс.3 месяца назад
You know that stuff "everybody knows" - but isn't true? The cultural equivalent of this in the Northeast of what's now North America is what's called "Yankee Lore"... This is stuff "everybody" in New England "just knows" about the history of the area... but which isn't true. Or, at the very least, is often inaccurate. From "Indians around here didn't build with stone", to the Pilgrims, the myth...
Experiencing Mysterious Earthworks, Odd Boulders, and More in UVM's Jericho Research Forest
Просмотров 5263 месяца назад
Imagine coming across enormous mounds and ridges on a hill in a forest in Vermont, then going home, looking it up on LIDAR, and seeing a massive grid laid out across the hill! What? Join stone site investigator Mike Luoma as he takes a look at some mysterious earthworks, potential effigy forms, a possibly perched wing shaped stone, and more potential ancient Indigenous stonework he came across ...
Experiencing Stone Rows, Possible Effigy Forms, & More in Boylston, Massachusetts
Просмотров 5873 месяца назад
Experiencing Stone Rows, Possible Effigy Forms, & More in Boylston, Massachusetts
Experiencing Part of Manitou Hassanash Preserve in Hopkinton, Rhode Island
Просмотров 7914 месяца назад
Experiencing Part of Manitou Hassanash Preserve in Hopkinton, Rhode Island
Experiencing Several Special Stone Sites in Connecticut & Rhode Island
Просмотров 1,2 тыс.4 месяца назад
Experiencing Several Special Stone Sites in Connecticut & Rhode Island
Experiencing Curious Stone Features in Holliston, Massachusetts
Просмотров 6326 месяцев назад
Experiencing Curious Stone Features in Holliston, Massachusetts
Returning to Possible Stone Prayers in a Hollow Near Richmond, Vermont - In the Snow
Просмотров 1808 месяцев назад
Returning to Possible Stone Prayers in a Hollow Near Richmond, Vermont - In the Snow
Revisiting Cairn Like Stone Constructs, Odd Shaped Erratics, and More in Jericho, Vermont
Просмотров 3679 месяцев назад
Revisiting Cairn Like Stone Constructs, Odd Shaped Erratics, and More in Jericho, Vermont
Experiencing Possible Serpent Rows and Potential Stone Prayers in a Hollow Near Richmond, Vermont
Просмотров 4209 месяцев назад
Experiencing Possible Serpent Rows and Potential Stone Prayers in a Hollow Near Richmond, Vermont
Ancient Stone Mysteries of New England: What I Look For In The Stones
Просмотров 4,7 тыс.10 месяцев назад
Ancient Stone Mysteries of New England: What I Look For In The Stones
Experiencing Stones and Foundations Near Preston Pond in Bolton Vermont
Просмотров 12810 месяцев назад
Experiencing Stones and Foundations Near Preston Pond in Bolton Vermont
Off Topic: Foliage Ride 2023
Просмотров 5111 месяцев назад
Off Topic: Foliage Ride 2023
Returning to an Old Stone Row in Hudson, Massachusetts
Просмотров 209Год назад
Returning to an Old Stone Row in Hudson, Massachusetts
Experiencing Possible Effigy Rows and a Stone Mound on an Old Road in the Richmond, Vermont Area
Просмотров 168Год назад
Experiencing Possible Effigy Rows and a Stone Mound on an Old Road in the Richmond, Vermont Area
Experiencing A Unique Glacial Erratic and other Curiously Shaped Stones in Berlin, Massachusetts
Просмотров 218Год назад
Experiencing A Unique Glacial Erratic and other Curiously Shaped Stones in Berlin, Massachusetts
Experiencing Cairn-Like Stone Constructs, Odd-Shaped Erratics, and More in Jericho, Vermont
Просмотров 298Год назад
Experiencing Cairn-Like Stone Constructs, Odd-Shaped Erratics, and More in Jericho, Vermont
Revisiting Stonework Surrounding Indian Brook Reservoir in Essex Vermont
Просмотров 228Год назад
Revisiting Stonework Surrounding Indian Brook Reservoir in Essex Vermont

Комментарии

  • @jonathanschadenfreude9603
    @jonathanschadenfreude9603 4 часа назад

    Good stuff mike! As a child of the area and at 50 years old realizing how far back my families go here......THESE videos are nature walks with my mimi all over again man. thx for doing this!

  • @FacesintheStone
    @FacesintheStone 14 часов назад

    Fantastic as always, thank you for the documentations! ❤🗿💯🔥🐦🌲🥰

    • @FacesintheStone
      @FacesintheStone 14 часов назад

      3:42 yes, please obtain your pass before going out into nature 😢

  • @mikecroper8422
    @mikecroper8422 День назад

    Humans have been putting stones on top of other stones (building) way before they invented the wheel, lol. It's bloody obvious !

  • @TheVTrider
    @TheVTrider 4 дня назад

    A friend & I discovered one of these stone chambers deep off a hiking trail in the backwoods behind Smuggler's Notch, VT. There were no other structures around at all and didn't seem to me like a root cellar. I feel that we were the first eyes to see this particular structure in centuries, it was very secluded.

  • @FacesintheStone
    @FacesintheStone 10 дней назад

    Very beautiful 🤩

  • @DanielMatthewDP
    @DanielMatthewDP 10 дней назад

    Very good sir!

  • @robertsikkema8505
    @robertsikkema8505 10 дней назад

    Culvert explanation appears quite plausible.

  • @briandoczahm
    @briandoczahm 10 дней назад

    I thought it looked like a culvert also. But the effort to remove a road, or even more effort needed to remove a railroad bed seems prohibitive. Though we know many ancient sites were stripped of their stonework, as it's easier to pilfer than to quarry. The same may apply for a road bed, moving the old one may be easier than attaining new material. There must be old maps of rail lines and roads available to compare.

    • @dogwalker666
      @dogwalker666 10 дней назад

      We have lots of old culverts very like this from the early pre steam railways, They only had wooden rails so they have rotted away in the past 1000 ish years.

    • @briandoczahm
      @briandoczahm 10 дней назад

      @@dogwalker666 We haven’t had rail roads for 1000 years. Typo? Even if the wooden ties rotted, the bed would still be there.

    • @dogwalker666
      @dogwalker666 10 дней назад

      @@briandoczahm Well slight exaggeration but not much the Roman's built the first to haul the ore from the mines, The railway used to be wooden "rails" hence Railway, pulled by slaves in the mines then Horses or men on the surface, We have a railway bridge still standing that's over 300 years old built entirely by hand long before the metal rails and even later the steam engine, The first steam railway used stationary engines and winches, There are lots of ruins and they are on early maps, along with the water ponds. Interesting fact the guy who designed the bridge didn't believe it would last, I walked over it yesterday. As to the bed the original was just compacted soil, it doesn't take very long for that too disappear, The old road here was replaced with the new road, it's still called that 100 years later, anyway that was hardcore, compacted aggregate and tarmac on top, I have an old photo, It had completely eroded away a mear 20 years after without maintenance, And has gone without a trace now, Nature reclaims! There was a village about 3 Miles from here that was devastated by smallpox and abandoned, It almost totally reclaimed by nature, You will be walking in the woods and suddenly realise you are inside a building the fire place and hearth still visable. Most of our village is 12th century but the church altar was originally from a Celtic goddess temple. Much older definitely pre Christian.

    • @briandoczahm
      @briandoczahm 10 дней назад

      @@dogwalker666 Yes I’ve seen that erosion many times. Contour of the land could prevent all from eroding. As it’s in North America I sort of ignored the pre iron horse era. I can’t imagine the stonework isn’t European, though from when I can’t say. I think if the native inhabitants had developed such stone techniques, we’d see it much more. What we see is more ceremonial placement of unworked stones. Or lightly worked.

    • @AncientStoneMysteries
      @AncientStoneMysteries 9 дней назад

      Yes. As I'm not able to share the location, I wasn't able to go into detail about the sources which led me to believe it was an old stone culvert. Or share photos of the damages from the flood in this area. But you are on the right track. I also have pilfering theories, as you describe, as the "quarry" area further uphill is also... notable.

  • @richardp2309
    @richardp2309 10 дней назад

    Fuc hol

  • @johnracine4589
    @johnracine4589 12 дней назад

    You have a great voice for narration! Thanks for sharing this important and neglected piece of history.

  • @nobhiker
    @nobhiker 13 дней назад

    thank for the video

  • @annmarierozik
    @annmarierozik 13 дней назад

    Love hearing about this most accurate information. Makes alot Sense.

  • @annmarierozik
    @annmarierozik 13 дней назад

    I am from Connecticutamd we have our own prehistoric Rock caves and or tunnels as well. One is in Groton, Ct. Called Gunnybunk something like that.

  • @westho7314
    @westho7314 16 дней назад

    Barry Fell, George Carter, Ruth Simpson & even the infamous Louis Leaky and many others in the field all had vision & views backed with physical evidence far beyond the short or near sightedness of Yankee diddley doodle..Granted those European colonists were hyper industrious workaholics and they did pile alot of stones in clearing of fields in their crude belief that this whole continient was some divine promised land created especially for them alone, with unlimited resources to exploit and profit on at will , & leading to the genocidal mania & manifest destiny we see & witness the results of those low hanging fruits and their disasterous laborsf today. The difference between working within the balance of nature and the blatant rape by clear cutting & plowing the new world into a inrecogniable manscape of oblivion was and still is brutal. That promised land, sea and air of Yankee diddle do lore is now polluted and has become toxic beyond any sense or form of spiritual or physical redemption.

  • @FacesintheStone
    @FacesintheStone 17 дней назад

    Thank you for the inadvertent shout out! ❤ I teach people how to see the art, it took me several weeks at a ceremonial site.

    • @AncientStoneMysteries
      @AncientStoneMysteries 16 дней назад

      Thank you!

    • @FacesintheStone
      @FacesintheStone 10 дней назад

      @@AncientStoneMysteries 4:26 it may come from the survival technique as you describe, or it may come the residual skills in carving and viewing this art. It’s not called something when you see birds and mammoths. Good way to set off a Portable Rock Art enthusiast is to say the P word! Pareidolia 😅 fantastic video, I really enjoy your uploads.

    • @AncientStoneMysteries
      @AncientStoneMysteries 9 дней назад

      Figured I would take the "P" word on, head on, as it were, and point out that it was equally as operative for ancient humans as it is for us. Thanks again!

  • @FacesintheStone
    @FacesintheStone 19 дней назад

    Super cool ❤

  • @dbproductions2767
    @dbproductions2767 20 дней назад

    I’m just wondering why the sight is only so small. Wouldn’t all the surrounding areas also be a site where you can find stuff from these times.

  • @chickfamilyink
    @chickfamilyink 21 день назад

    I was thinking about Joe Citro and Antrim and then you said you knew him. Vermont is awesome.

  • @warringtonfaust1088
    @warringtonfaust1088 24 дня назад

    I wonder that poking around caves in New England wouldn't produce a few black bears.

  • @btmukkx
    @btmukkx 24 дня назад

    Humans had graven images a lot longer than they had geologist.

  • @CrankErUp
    @CrankErUp 25 дней назад

    What a well-made, informative, and very enjoyable to watch video! Great job!!

  • @toddabbruzzese3974
    @toddabbruzzese3974 27 дней назад

    Mr. Luoma I have a family member with an undocumented underground stone anomaly id like you to see. PM me please

  • @bellakaldera3305
    @bellakaldera3305 27 дней назад

    There is lime mortar here, which suggests Colonial or 19th Century building technique, could be a milk house or a root cellar.

  • @0Eliza0
    @0Eliza0 28 дней назад

    I ended-up buying a ton of books for a private library community that I am starting in Massachusetts. You are a huge inspiration!

  • @StandingStones1776-vb6zn
    @StandingStones1776-vb6zn 28 дней назад

    I love this stuff, there is a wall in Foxboro Mass. right behind the big AT&T Cell Tower there is a dirt parking lot and if you walk in a bit then climb on rocks you see it.BTW the radio waves that come out of that thing made me sick I had to leave

  • @Je-Lia
    @Je-Lia 29 дней назад

    Any in Maine? Interesting video. Thank you.

    • @AncientStoneMysteries
      @AncientStoneMysteries 28 дней назад

      Yes! I've helped investigate sites in Maine, still helping, actually. Here's one of my videos from Maine: ruclips.net/video/0dYHDU7Xp04/видео.html

  • @aaronwilliams007
    @aaronwilliams007 Месяц назад

    I read Vatican Assassin! The small snakes of Vt definitely live and hunt around rock walls. I definitely need to look closer at the rock walls for these eye formations! Thanks.

    • @AncientStoneMysteries
      @AncientStoneMysteries 28 дней назад

      Thank you for checking out a couple different facets of my writing! I take some inspiration from Robert Silverberg, who not only wrote great science fiction, he also wrote about the Indigenous Mound Builders of the Midwest. Got a bit crotchety in his old age, but still...

  • @pennsyltuckyreb9800
    @pennsyltuckyreb9800 Месяц назад

    N@tive American historians (actual N@tive American ones, not the why-t3 liberal ones rewriting history), will tell you none of them ever built ANY of these stone structures, whether in North America or South America. Most stone structures were here long before they were. They may have repurposed them at times, but they generally stayed away from them as they were seen to be foreign sacred structures that were spiritually a threat to them. Bad juju kind of thing. The only group of N@tives to use and build stone structures and sacrificial stone alters were the Guale of Jekyll Island, Georgia. According to Conquistador recon reports, they were massive in stature and even their women were over 9ft. They made blood sacrifices. They possessed the only recurve bows, including metal weaponry in North America... reminiscent of Middle Eastern peoples like the Canaanites. Most, if not all, of these structures have precise alignments to various stars, equinoxes, etc. All part of America's hidden history not taught in schools today..

  • @c.t.murray3632
    @c.t.murray3632 Месяц назад

    As I used to walk through the woods as a kid I would see these stone walls and the narrative was that colonials had to move the stones to make a field for planting. As usual I took it for granted. I never wanted to move the stones. I never wanted to reconstruct it. something told me don't touch . Now I know why these are sacred Stones walls.

  • @Lisa-mw6te
    @Lisa-mw6te Месяц назад

    Thank you for telling the truth.

  • @jayebrady11
    @jayebrady11 Месяц назад

    The depiction of the attack at 2:40 looks very accurate to what Mrs. Rowlandson described. She wrote that the Natives stood "behind the slope of a small hill, upon which our home stood". There is a tree stump now where the house was, and maybe 10 feet away, a small hill exactly like the one illustrated here. I have stood on that very spot, and all I can say is that the energy there is very heavy and sad.

  • @cherylconway2788
    @cherylconway2788 Месяц назад

    Nice presentation!

  • @cloveralpacason6716
    @cloveralpacason6716 Месяц назад

    Did you check out the stone chamber? And the one man wide Stonebridge currently under a Beaver dam

    • @AncientStoneMysteries
      @AncientStoneMysteries Месяц назад

      I did. Will have to be its own Feature Focus. A future Feature Focus...

  • @nobhiker
    @nobhiker Месяц назад

    Thanks for the video

  • @mk1fourwinds62
    @mk1fourwinds62 Месяц назад

    Hmm. 🤔

  • @markcain4676
    @markcain4676 Месяц назад

    Was this video shot anywhere near the rail trail by the arch bridge?

    • @AncientStoneMysteries
      @AncientStoneMysteries 28 дней назад

      I'm not sure, it was a guided hike and I didn't see the rail trail or arch bridge, that I know of.

  • @phishENchimps
    @phishENchimps Месяц назад

    I hard a theory that they were used by Native hunters who would stay back in the winter time to maintain watch on their lands. Living in the valleys in winter = DEATH, so they would build and construct higher elevations to avoid the death cold at night. They said that most tribes would travel South during the winter to avoid the harsh conditions and had well known passages and trails running all along the Eastern seaboard while some of the men would stay back and wait for their return. makes sense. you don't want Squatters coming in.

    • @brawlpups3517
      @brawlpups3517 Месяц назад

      The Wabanaki-Abenaki moved seasonally within the local region up and down local watersheds. Abenaki also travel between related friendly villages. They might long distance travel as well but not as a tribal group since the would be challenged by unrelated groups or hostile villages. Travel to other areas for adventure or to other groups through the clan system, or for warfare, but not seasonally.

  • @TheFarmacySeedsNetwork
    @TheFarmacySeedsNetwork Месяц назад

    You got my subscription... Thanks for the great info and perspective! 🌱

  • @Lwolfjaw07
    @Lwolfjaw07 Месяц назад

    What is the depth of the soil on the top of the chamber?

  • @JohnPaul-158
    @JohnPaul-158 Месяц назад

    COOL

  • @padraigmaclochlainn8866
    @padraigmaclochlainn8866 Месяц назад

    Its formerly on the Forebush family land yet they make no record of itnon maps going back to the 1790s.

  • @StandingStones1776-vb6zn
    @StandingStones1776-vb6zn Месяц назад

    I was in there about 4 months ago and went in my first time there yet I knew about it for decades, I picked up ORBS floating up on my camera

  • @steamroller1474
    @steamroller1474 Месяц назад

    The layout reminds me of New Grange layout.

  • @bellakaldera3305
    @bellakaldera3305 Месяц назад

    I wonder how all that timber got in there, much of it looks cut. Who would chuck logs into such a place?

    • @AncientStoneMysteries
      @AncientStoneMysteries Месяц назад

      The passageway and chamber are often flooded, so presumably those were thrown in there to allow people to walk into the chamber when it was flooded.

  • @Raised-on-Ramen
    @Raised-on-Ramen Месяц назад

    The building style is very similar to what the @BKR - Scottish adventures channel has explored in Scotland. There are many interconnected stone chambers and "hallways" that he explores. This stuff has always fascinated me as a New Englander raised in New Hampshire. There's a lot of strange stuff out there in the woods!

  • @robertsikkema8505
    @robertsikkema8505 Месяц назад

    Locally we call that formation the Anticline. As the area of the path is steep and unstable, it's doubtful there's human manipulation.

    • @AncientStoneMysteries
      @AncientStoneMysteries Месяц назад

      Locally, I've heard it called "The Oven" a lot more than "The Anticline".

  • @FacesintheStone
    @FacesintheStone Месяц назад

    Super cool ❤

    • @FacesintheStone
      @FacesintheStone Месяц назад

      Don’t feel bad about getting rid of those trees. The ancient people would’ve done that to preserve it each season, they came to visit

  • @dogwalker666
    @dogwalker666 Месяц назад

    It looks like a rock Troll about to munch down on you! Fascinating formation.

  • @elizabethtowers3321
    @elizabethtowers3321 Месяц назад

    The oven is very interesting and looks like there could be some man made alterations.

  • @cinecyclist
    @cinecyclist Месяц назад

    Thanks ! That's my old hometown.