Ancient Stone Mysteries of New England - Feature Focus: The Upton Stone Chamber

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 18 сен 2024
  • 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 related subjects in concentrated doses, filled with his footage, photos and briefly related facts and speculation, mining his many hours of video footage and many hundreds of thousands of images to create new compilations using both seen and previously unseen work from his archives.
    If there are features you would like Mike to focus on, please suggest them in the comments.
    A DIY work by Mike Luoma. Everything here is the work of Mike, with the exception of the Music - Mike uses Royalty-Free work by Composer and Performer Kevin MacLeod. Official credits follow below:
    Music Credits:
    Silver Flame by Kevin MacLeod
    Link: incompetech.fi...
    License: creativecommons...
    Healing by Kevin MacLeod
    Link: incompetech.fi....
    License: creativecommons....

Комментарии • 6

  • @Raised-on-Ramen
    @Raised-on-Ramen Месяц назад +1

    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!

  • @steamroller1474
    @steamroller1474 Месяц назад +1

    The layout reminds me of New Grange layout.

  • @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

  • @padraigmaclochlainn8866
    @padraigmaclochlainn8866 Месяц назад

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

  • @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 +1

      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.