The Mystery of New England's Many Stone Chambers

Ойын-сауық

Sorry its been a while since my last upload, I really wanted to put my best effort into this one.
There are hundreds of stone chambers out in the woods of New England & New York. I made this video to cover a few of the theories behind their presence.
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Further Reading/References:
www.onlyinyourstate.com/conne...
www.strange-new-england.com/20...
www.strange-new-england.com/20...
www.uptonma.gov/historical-co...
www.ancientpages.com/2017/10/...
www.sciencedirect.com/science...
www.showcaves.com/english/usa...
www.milforddailynews.com/arti...
stonewings.wordpress.com/2012...
thestonetrust.org/master-clas...
www.richardcassaro.com/new-en...
northernwoodlands.org/article...
archive.boston.com/news/local/...

Пікірлер: 765

  • @bromethiustrilbotbromeldeh6625
    @bromethiustrilbotbromeldeh6625 Жыл бұрын

    My grandfather spoke of dwarf legends, but insisted logically it was a food cache storage site. It means the world to me that you filmed inside

  • @MerryGoldberry

    @MerryGoldberry

    4 ай бұрын

    I like the Dwarf legend explanation best! :D

  • @beardedbeauty3231

    @beardedbeauty3231

    2 ай бұрын

    little people/ moon eyed people/ hulderfolk....

  • @BobKermanKsp1

    @BobKermanKsp1

    2 ай бұрын

    the dwarves were just not home, i would know that as i am one myself

  • @lilyw.719

    @lilyw.719

    Ай бұрын

    Maybe some were ice houses.

  • @General_Kenobi_212

    @General_Kenobi_212

    Ай бұрын

    Reminds me of the Pukwudgie legend

  • @gafasd
    @gafasd2 жыл бұрын

    You really nailed the "I'm alone in the woods let's walk like a regular person"-walk

  • @nolanleblanc

    @nolanleblanc

    4 ай бұрын

    That was truly incredible

  • @kx250monster1023244

    @kx250monster1023244

    Ай бұрын

    the funny part is this chamber is BARELY in the woods.

  • @badsawww

    @badsawww

    Ай бұрын

    I usually hike solo listening to music and definitely do this every time I pass pepple.

  • @1TakoyakiStore

    @1TakoyakiStore

    9 күн бұрын

    My internal dialog: Dammit he knows!

  • @pattimessenger6214
    @pattimessenger62145 ай бұрын

    Some of those might be spring houses. Spring houses are marvelous! They provided a source of fresh water, kept clean by surrounding the head of a spring with a structure. And, the shallow water in the bottom was very cool as it came out of the earth. It was a source of free refrigeration. You could put crocks of fresh food, milk, butter, meat, etc. in the water. Not deep enough for water to come over the edge. The food was kept cool. In hot weather, the spring house was the coolest place in town! You could hang out in there and stay cool and drink fresh, cool water right from the spring!

  • @tumblewheed5994

    @tumblewheed5994

    4 ай бұрын

    That's what I was going to suggest was that they might be water cisterns!

  • @user-nc9hb4pf9x

    @user-nc9hb4pf9x

    4 ай бұрын

    Shauberger taught that by covering the spring, it will keep flowing and not dry out

  • @user-cz1te1nc5d

    @user-cz1te1nc5d

    4 ай бұрын

    We had a spring "house" on our property. That's what it looked like.

  • @PhillipJermakian

    @PhillipJermakian

    2 ай бұрын

    If you wanted that wouldn't you aim the door at the winter solstice's sun?

  • @matthew7419

    @matthew7419

    2 ай бұрын

    Some caves at the bottom of hills have very cold air because the air goes between the broken up rocks in the hill, and cools as it descends. If they're dry, they might be ice storage. The ice cellar at Gadsby's Tavern in Alexandria, VA is beehive shaped. If they're wet they could be spring houses. The only spring house I've seen was wooden with a concrete foundation and had a spring running through it, not out of it - but maybe it was named after caves like this that were built over springs.

  • @sammarkey672
    @sammarkey6722 жыл бұрын

    It's good to see that someone hikes the same way I do!

  • @PNNYRFACE

    @PNNYRFACE

    2 ай бұрын

    Jog like the orcs of Isengard

  • @stevoplex
    @stevoplex3 ай бұрын

    As kids growing up in rural/suburban Connecticut in the 1970s, the woods were totally crosshatched with stone walls. We'd rearrange stones into a ring, dig down about a meter, make a bit of roof. We called them "rock forts" and we camped out in them. Sometimes making a fire pit adjacent.

  • @SantaFishes101

    @SantaFishes101

    2 ай бұрын

    yes, they are still there.

  • @mobaj1147

    @mobaj1147

    2 ай бұрын

    Still no concrete information on the stone walls that line the forests endlessly throughout the north east US. They are everywhere in plain sight, yet no one ever questions them. Most I've heard is they were created by the farmers who cleared the forests during the Great NorthEast Mass Sheep Farming Era. All the trees were cut from New Jersey to main and all the stones cleared from landscape and stacked so Sheep could graze. But that doesn't seem right with me. No record of such deforestation and stone clearing. And that much Sheep would be insane nowadays, let alone back when America was like 100,000 people😂

  • @abraxasjinx5207

    @abraxasjinx5207

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@mobaj1147that farmer theory fails to answer why intact soil samples read to be 600 years old.

  • @SantaFishes101

    @SantaFishes101

    2 ай бұрын

    @@mobaj1147 I was told it was native american so we shouldn't move them. others told me it's both old farms and vanity.

  • @harvey195

    @harvey195

    Ай бұрын

    We used to call the one in Thompson Connecticut the Indian tomb back in the 70s.

  • @andrewreda7100
    @andrewreda71002 жыл бұрын

    This video was great, a lot more in depth than some of your previous ones and the story telling aspect was on point. Keep it up man, I never get tired of these.

  • @DimeStoreAdventures

    @DimeStoreAdventures

    2 жыл бұрын

    hey, thanks so much! Appreciate it!

  • @LoriPark1111

    @LoriPark1111

    Жыл бұрын

    Amen!

  • @Alex-eo9of
    @Alex-eo9of2 ай бұрын

    I think the early settlers of New England realized there was a large amount of stones in the top soil, and as they built their farms, they cleared out this land. Some of those stones were used for property walls, and others were used to make root cellars, to protect natural springs, etc.

  • @brooklynnchick
    @brooklynnchickАй бұрын

    I grew up in Montana in the Forest Grove area, a now abandoned gold rush town. I was acquainted with a farming/ranching family of the name Lundeen, I believe the matriarch was Ida and her husband was Jim. I was privileged to be included on a tour of a sheltering rock ledge deep in a gully with a freshwater spring at the bottom. Along the ledge were many Indigenous pictographs made with natural pigments. There were also symbols which visiting archaeologists had found and (confusedly) attributed to a Scandinavian presence because the images (a series of cross-like figures that appear in succession to tumble across the space, human-like figures throwing spears at animals and other ‘humans’ with large round or oblong shields) are similar to those found at Neolithic sites in Norway etc. Just a fun story to share with you! I think you are very interesting and you made me smile. Thank you! ❤

  • @hamburger512
    @hamburger512 Жыл бұрын

    Lived in NH all my life. Never seen or heard of these. Now I have something new to look for haha

  • @peterbrown8230

    @peterbrown8230

    Ай бұрын

    Check out America's Stonehenge in Salem NH

  • @saltpeter7429

    @saltpeter7429

    Ай бұрын

    There is on in my home town. On top of a hill, its actually in my ild coworkers property. I live in West Central NH, just around the base of Mt. CARDIGAN. These are all over New England. I have a book or two about it, one is called MANITOU. check it out.

  • @jimmydean4336

    @jimmydean4336

    Ай бұрын

    Check out the beehive hut in danville nh if you can find it

  • @genekelly8467
    @genekelly84672 жыл бұрын

    I live in MA, and have seen many of these. They were thought to be "root cellars" (for the storage of root vegetables over the winters); the problem with this is that none of them are near any human settlements. The most impressive one is "Mystery Hill" in Salem, NH-that one has some carvings suggestive of Phoenican styles.

  • @kennethstickney8819

    @kennethstickney8819

    4 ай бұрын

    Not so. I used to know a really nice root cellar whereabouts in Rockport, Massachusetts

  • @slizzysluzzer

    @slizzysluzzer

    4 ай бұрын

    The thing is, if they were root cellars, they'd be for farmers who's farmsteads have likely long since vanished. A lot of old farms even back ~50-60 years ago are long gone now.

  • @ryelor123

    @ryelor123

    2 ай бұрын

    Could've been traps for animals. There might have been a one-way door or something.

  • @eoinmolloy545

    @eoinmolloy545

    2 ай бұрын

    @@ryelor123 not a chance

  • @InAHandBasket

    @InAHandBasket

    2 ай бұрын

    Yeah, Mystery Hill is more than a root cellar set up, for sure. The sound chamber thing, the rocks set up around it and the size. Not just a little cave set in the ground.

  • @eucliduschaumeau8813
    @eucliduschaumeau8813Ай бұрын

    I’ve lived in New England since 1961 and have seen many root cellars and ice houses, both on historic properties and in the forest. There is a lot of evidence that the more complex chambers and stoneworks can be attributed to indigenous peoples and cultures as far back as the recession of the last glacial maximum.

  • @Jared_Albert

    @Jared_Albert

    22 күн бұрын

    Nothing indigenous about earlier migrant groups. The entire species came from Africa. To say otherwise dehumanizes other homo sapien sapiens

  • @Justintime619
    @Justintime6194 ай бұрын

    The miniture mining light was everything! The song “High ho” started going through my mind the minute you entered that cave lol! Would LOVE to see the sunlight during a summer solstice light one of these up!

  • @Sn4fu
    @Sn4fu Жыл бұрын

    These stone chambers live rent free in my head, I think they're so cool/mysterious, and then i think about this video and having wet socks/shoes on. That's dedication dude, this is one of my fav videos had to give it a rewatch. 2:43 is an amazing shot, also it's really clever the framing of the narration. A guy stumbling upon this in the woods and following his curiosity. Really causes buildup and climax of curiosity near the end. It's like watching someone go down a historical rabbit hole. This took one took alot of work with the cameras, I would not want to spend more than 5 mins in that upton chamber haha too spooky big and wet.

  • @alexhasan2545
    @alexhasan25452 жыл бұрын

    That ending was so cool. You're a great storyteller, keep it up man!

  • @DimeStoreAdventures

    @DimeStoreAdventures

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @MegCazalet
    @MegCazalet2 ай бұрын

    As a child, one of those would be my DREAM “playhouse”. Oh man, it’s truly what I would fantasize about.

  • @skateguy50
    @skateguy508 ай бұрын

    Just seeing this now, we live right near the Uxbridge one and walk to it a lot. What stands out about that one is the opening in the ceiling makes it look like a great shelter for having a small fire inside it but not so great for storing food.

  • @ryelor123

    @ryelor123

    2 ай бұрын

    Could've been used for drying lumber or stuff related to furs. They might've been like a small oven

  • @dreamoutloud2629
    @dreamoutloud26294 ай бұрын

    I grew up and still live in NW Connecticut. These things are all over and so fun to explore! I've had friends find old skeleton keys in the walls of these bad boys and in the front of old stone walls outside cemeteries! So much cool history to unravel.

  • @nomorenames5568
    @nomorenames55682 жыл бұрын

    Such a cool video. Never would have thought that second person narration would work so well for an informational video.

  • @kalebbuck8346
    @kalebbuck83464 ай бұрын

    Man keep doing what your doing! It's awesome! It got me looking into my towns history and intresting stories!

  • @redneckhippy2020
    @redneckhippy2020Ай бұрын

    Ah, you obviously work for the Ministry of Unusual Walks. Very good. Carry on.

  • @KarlosRival
    @KarlosRival2 жыл бұрын

    This is actually a really well, thought out video! Nice job, it was a pleasure watching

  • @chrisball3778
    @chrisball37784 ай бұрын

    The similar underground chambers we have in Britain and Ireland weren't built by monks- they are mostly prehistoric. Racists have often been guilty of playing down the technical achievements of indigenous peoples. My guess would definitely be that they're a mixture of Native American structures and colonial root cellars, but that previous generations were reluctant to acknowledge that Native Americans built them. Native North American people didn't build a lot of stone structures in the North East of the continent, as there was plenty of wood for building, but in the South and West, where there are fewer forests, it was much more common- e.g. at sites like Chaco Canyon and Mesa Verde. Native American people in the NE would be more likely to use stone for building structures when it would have particular benefits- e.g. for underground chambers, where wood might rot and lead to a cave-in. Corbelling evolved separately in many arts of the world, and there's absolutely no reason Native American people couldn't have developed the technique. Either that, or it was Hobbits all along.

  • @ryelor123

    @ryelor123

    2 ай бұрын

    There's racists on all sides of these issues. There isn't any clear thinking on these things. The people who think everything was ceremonial or tombs are wrong about that as well. The reality is that these caves were probably built for tanning hides or drying food. People today have no idea how difficult it was to get clothing back then. There were no factories to mass produce textiles and wooden structures were too important to be used for tasks that would render them unfit for occupation especially due to the poisonous residues organic combustion. Building a house out of trees was very difficult back then.

  • @FLStelth
    @FLStelth7 ай бұрын

    Your video was very unique! Thought-provoking AND humorous. Well done.

  • @sarahcarr9847
    @sarahcarr9847 Жыл бұрын

    😂 this is awesome 🤣 "Alright men! let's march ourselves hundreds of miles deep into these woods, build like 400 little hutts, and then get the hell out of here forever! HOP TO IT!" I can't 😂

  • @ryelor123

    @ryelor123

    2 ай бұрын

    Probably for tanning hides. It smells bad and part of the process can involve smoking them. Also could've been used for smoking food. The water on the floor is probably due to soil compaction due to people walking in there all the time.

  • @rayp-w5930

    @rayp-w5930

    29 күн бұрын

    funny

  • @michaelfourie
    @michaelfourie3 ай бұрын

    I can imagine that at some point hunters probably used some of them as temporary shelters if they got stuck out in bad weather or decided to overnight out there and continue hunting the next morning.

  • @BigPoppa931
    @BigPoppa9312 жыл бұрын

    You are really nailing your videos. Love this channel.

  • @maryettasurrette8489
    @maryettasurrette84892 жыл бұрын

    love this video... wish i was brave enough to go in the caves 😱 thx 4 filming 💡

  • @MrRealAmericanvalues
    @MrRealAmericanvalues2 жыл бұрын

    Really great and fascinating video. You did a great job of summarizing the info. I live in the PNW so I've never seen these.

  • @DimeStoreAdventures

    @DimeStoreAdventures

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks so much, means a lot! Glad I could show off how cool they are!

  • @audas

    @audas

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@DimeStoreAdventures Except - Vikings. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norse_colonization_of_North_America

  • @user-gv4mi9cd2y

    @user-gv4mi9cd2y

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@audasthe vikings never made it to new england though. Only canada.

  • @pixiefromdelaware
    @pixiefromdelaware2 ай бұрын

    This was wonderful! Thank you! As a retired teacher, this could have been used in as a lesson in writing informational text. I loved your technique.

  • @Bbbuddy
    @Bbbuddy4 ай бұрын

    One thing we have a lot of in New England is rocks, and there were many farms that no longer exist. Witness the fieldstone walls running through the woods everywhere. There were so many rocks pulled from fields during plowing, that I’m sure people sat around thinking of creative stuff to do with them.

  • @leightongalleries6057

    @leightongalleries6057

    Ай бұрын

    So very true, and more true than you perfectly described. The glaciers left millions of them in the soil, and as the fields were plowed, they were used as walls delineating property lines, foundations, and walls of homes, barns, bridges, roads, etc. They are everywhere in the NE

  • @jsmythib

    @jsmythib

    23 күн бұрын

    I think the old Yankees saying was 'waste not, want not. ' :)

  • @Asuran99
    @Asuran992 жыл бұрын

    And here I was 2 days ago wondering where you went. And now I notice that you posted 3 days ago. What am I even doing. Nice chambers and thanks for showing me something new.

  • @tacolepaco
    @tacolepaco2 жыл бұрын

    I just love how he was able to find a nearby chamber to do this video with.

  • @atiredbee9228
    @atiredbee9228Ай бұрын

    you know id really like to see a found footage film from you now. youre really good at walking into random mysterious scary places without a care in the world. ideally, narrated in the same exact style even when the ghosts happen

  • @smrk2452
    @smrk24522 ай бұрын

    I went to college in Massachusetts and saw these on a hike. I always wondered about the long stone walls found in the woods all over New England. Thanks for doing this video.

  • @sauercrowder

    @sauercrowder

    Ай бұрын

    The stone walls are a separate thing. That's from farmers plowing their fields. They had to clear the land before they could plant, so they plowed the rocks to the edge of their field and piled them there. Since the rocks had to be cleared anyway, they used them to mark the property line.

  • @misterkevinoh
    @misterkevinoh Жыл бұрын

    You deserve way more views and subscribers. That was so engaging.

  • @SpencerFoustLovesYou
    @SpencerFoustLovesYou2 жыл бұрын

    Quickly falling in love with your channel--keep up the content!

  • @Maxcom12
    @Maxcom122 жыл бұрын

    excellent video dude. I've been watching your stuff over the last day and you've definitely earned a new sub. I wonder if the Goshen mystery tunnel is classified as one of these things? I remember that being a pretty famous one I heard about back when I lived in New England.

  • @SimonSozzi7258
    @SimonSozzi725810 ай бұрын

    Native Americans used corbaling all over Mexico. The Maya arch is a corbal arch.

  • @carolinegray7510

    @carolinegray7510

    2 ай бұрын

    See Graham Hancock's Before America.

  • @jbh1126
    @jbh1126 Жыл бұрын

    Very cool, I’ve been exploring and finding similar chambers in the lower Hudson valley, also with cairns on nearby hills, also with solstice alignments.

  • @KosmStudios

    @KosmStudios

    7 ай бұрын

    any resources you have on finding these in hudson valley?

  • @georgeallison3629

    @georgeallison3629

    2 ай бұрын

    Putnam County is full of em. Outside of Cold Springs and Beacon.

  • @richardblakeley8816

    @richardblakeley8816

    2 ай бұрын

    I saw one near the AT around East Fishkill, very cool

  • @timmystool3349

    @timmystool3349

    2 ай бұрын

    I thubk many of the stone walls and What they did with the remains of castles:temples they destroyed

  • @jbh1126

    @jbh1126

    2 ай бұрын

    @@timmystool3349 I wish it was that exciting, it’s mostly old farmland and the walls delineated one farmers field from the next

  • @virgilesepulchre8963
    @virgilesepulchre8963 Жыл бұрын

    Wow didn't expect to stumble upon this gem

  • @cloudgoose
    @cloudgooseАй бұрын

    I definitely got chills when you described the connection between the cairns, the Upton chamber, and the Pleiades. very very cool. the Upton Chamber, and those who may have built it, reminds me of Spiro Mounds in Oklahoma. there, people from the indigenous Caddoan culture group built structures on top of burial mounds that similarly utilize light entering chambers to map out or display effects based on celestial movements. it is incredibly cool to visit on the summer solstice.

  • @waylonk2453
    @waylonk2453Ай бұрын

    I love the artistic sloshing at the end of the video. Bravo!

  • @grangerweasley
    @grangerweasley4 ай бұрын

    I’m going to start hiking like that from now on 😂 Another fantastic video!

  • @cobaltusa
    @cobaltusa9 ай бұрын

    Great video entertaining and informative I'm so glad I found it. Thank you

  • @lunamortuus
    @lunamortuusАй бұрын

    I found one of these in Andover, NH that I always used to hang out in as a child. It was beautiful and went very very deep. Deeper than I'd like to share, and overlooked a well known pond in the area. Still go there every once in a while to unwind.

  • @nickauclair1477
    @nickauclair1477 Жыл бұрын

    You have a unique and fun way of making extremely well researched documentaries. Do one on the Newport tower. Who made it.

  • @googiegress7459

    @googiegress7459

    Жыл бұрын

    mEsOpOtAmIaNs

  • @robertclark972

    @robertclark972

    Ай бұрын

    Templar, i m o .

  • @AnanyaGupta
    @AnanyaGupta2 жыл бұрын

    Incredible story-telling art - subscribed and liked!

  • @traildoggy
    @traildoggy4 ай бұрын

    I know of a similar 2 room chamber built behind a crevice in a large rock along the Potomac river. We used to go in there to party as teens in the 70's. It was a mess with broken glass at the time. It was not rock lined like that, but had rectangular rooms cut into the earth. The rumor was that it had been a stop on the Underground Railroad to hide escaping slaves heading north.

  • @ryelor123

    @ryelor123

    2 ай бұрын

    I know this is going to come as a shock to you, but the underground railroad probably had more to do with unethical human trafficking and less to do with charitable works. There's a reason why all the stories involve young girls and young women. They were clean of syphilis and thus valuable for certain services for men.

  • @vividvisions693

    @vividvisions693

    2 ай бұрын

    @@ryelor123 That's random but thank you for teaching me something new today. Fair to say not much has changed, eh? Just the systems and how human trafficiking goes on very much so to this day unfortunately.

  • @keltic341thoughtyouknuskii34

    @keltic341thoughtyouknuskii34

    2 ай бұрын

    Listen to what this girl says she knows because she was human traffic by the underground railroad and forced to deepthroat bj the whole way a whole new meaning to working on the railroad. ​@@vividvisions693

  • @bikeman5

    @bikeman5

    8 сағат бұрын

    underground railroad didnt mean under the earth, it meant secretive, hidden out of plan site these were not used to hide slaves, especially this far north, they were for storage

  • @bikeman5

    @bikeman5

    8 сағат бұрын

    as interesting as it was, you didnt offer any facts, also note they were for storage.

  • @raisethesurface9574
    @raisethesurface95742 жыл бұрын

    Great video really captivating!👏

  • @Emy53
    @Emy53Ай бұрын

    Your stride cracks me up.

  • @joelslater4587
    @joelslater4587 Жыл бұрын

    Hey I live in CT and have done some work at the Gungywamp site in Groton CT. It is known for its rock/stone cellars. About 2 years ago we found stone carvings that look like Chi Rhos near the stone mounds and cellars. Which is evidence towards Irish Monks. More work is being done by Vance at the State Archeological Society to verify these claims but things were looking promising! Just found your content today and absolutely love it!

  • @1962ferdi

    @1962ferdi

    5 ай бұрын

    Hey Joel was there any follow up to those carvings? Super cool!

  • @MrChristianDT

    @MrChristianDT

    5 ай бұрын

    What kind of chi rho? Because Natives did commonly use a cross in a circle as a religious motif, themselves. It'd be hard to know of it's a Native motif, or not, unless I saw one. I looked it up & found mention of something similar in an article, but the pic of the carving wouldn't load in.

  • @AxelSpott

    @AxelSpott

    4 ай бұрын

    @@MrChristianDTthere’s almost nothing at that site that points to anything but a long used (literally thousands of years) Native American ceremonial site and one time colonial farm settlement.

  • @shushnow3812

    @shushnow3812

    Ай бұрын

    I went on a small private tour 30 years ago with an archaeologist at Gungywamp. We had permission bc it is on private land. We saw the Chi Ro carved in the rock. We also saw cairns. We went in a rock cellar which had a slit window on one end. I was told at the equinox or solstice the light passing through the slit would illuminate an doorway to the right of the entrance, which was very small.

  • @mashleyden
    @mashleydenАй бұрын

    I live in Massachusetts. Thank you for going into one of those so I can finally see what’s inside. I couldn’t go in without being reminding of the game Amnesia.

  • @nonesuchone
    @nonesuchone2 жыл бұрын

    outstanding. here for more.

  • @mrnoname98
    @mrnoname982 жыл бұрын

    me: Upton chamber? What's Upton Chamber? Ton Chamber: Nothing much, what's up with you?

  • @muddyshoesgardener
    @muddyshoesgardener2 ай бұрын

    The ones I have been in always have water - the floor is sloshy with water. . They have a rounded construction of rocks or rocks and bricks. The spring entrance appears to be a way to keep something cool. I even wondered if they were a type of bathing house. This is a great topic and I would love to learn more about

  • @phos2602
    @phos26024 ай бұрын

    Freaking awesome! But I’m really sorry about your lack of long rain boots of some kind.

  • @finmin2k
    @finmin2k2 жыл бұрын

    my left ear really enjoyed this video, great job!

  • @mattjax16
    @mattjax16Ай бұрын

    Great video As a new englander you’ve answered questions I’ve always had

  • @monkcheetah8203
    @monkcheetah8203 Жыл бұрын

    I have found one of these in Ledyard and North stonington CT. Done very similar to those of course not is large is uptown’s . I have two short videos on them. Great video! 🐆🐆🐆🐆🐆🐆🐆🐆

  • @senseweaver01
    @senseweaver012 жыл бұрын

    Wow, this is the first of yours I've seen, and you can bet your ass I'm staying! Very well done!

  • @DimeStoreAdventures

    @DimeStoreAdventures

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks! Glad you liked it!

  • @PanicAttackRecovery
    @PanicAttackRecoveryАй бұрын

    What an interesting video. Well done! Hard to believe that they could have been created 600 years ago and align with the summer solstice and light the chamber and water.

  • @metaldetectoristmatt
    @metaldetectoristmatt2 жыл бұрын

    Wicked, I haven't spotted many structures like these while out metal detecting but I'll have to keep my eyes out. Hate to fall down one I hadn't noticed!

  • @jameswarren1891
    @jameswarren18912 жыл бұрын

    You've outdone yourself with this video. Excellent job, DSA!

  • @DimeStoreAdventures

    @DimeStoreAdventures

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks a ton!

  • @MerryGoldberry
    @MerryGoldberry4 ай бұрын

    These are so cool, I'd love to see them in person! I bet they have more than one explanation, and were built by more than one people group. Things quite often turn out that way when people try to find one catchall explanation for a lot of varying things and forget for a while that humans copy (or come up with) other humans' styles and techniques for all kinds of purposes.

  • @esm1817

    @esm1817

    2 ай бұрын

    And one technique found to work by one people could also be independently adopted by another. Or something built by one group can be repurposed by another.

  • @jonathanaffatato1715

    @jonathanaffatato1715

    2 ай бұрын

    @merrygoldberry If you Google “Gungywamp”, it’s part of a nature preserve. You can schedule a tour of the chamber sites. It’s quite easy. I did it last summer.

  • @donnamcardle8928
    @donnamcardle89282 ай бұрын

    This was really cool!thank you

  • @hojster24
    @hojster242 жыл бұрын

    Found u on Reddit, northeaster here, this is seriously cool

  • @DungeonsAndDrams
    @DungeonsAndDrams2 жыл бұрын

    Found this video on reddit. I live in MA and have never seen any of these. I'll start looking for them!

  • @artsymamanana
    @artsymamananaАй бұрын

    Hiding places, that seemed tiny were sometimes used by the underground railroad, theres also root cellars, springs, and basic storage.

  • @bellowphone
    @bellowphoneАй бұрын

    I was shown one of these, along a dirt road in central western Massachusetts. It was built into the side of a hill; the floor was about 3 feet below the entrance, and was of dry hard packed earth. The chamber was a beehive shape, neatly lined with stones which arched over to form the roof, and just high enough to stand upright. None of the locals had any idea how old it was, or for what purpose it was made.

  • @riverbendreptiles
    @riverbendreptiles3 ай бұрын

    Ayy pretty awesome that you were in my little town! Oneco CT! I've always wondered about the chamber in the woods!

  • @n0lanv0id
    @n0lanv0id2 жыл бұрын

    Seriously fascinating - never heard of these structures. Quality production and intriguing content ✌&🤟

  • @DimeStoreAdventures

    @DimeStoreAdventures

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you! Glad you enjoyed it!

  • @grahamwyatt1452
    @grahamwyatt14522 жыл бұрын

    Awesome video. I didn't quite get what you meant at the end when you said a strobe shined between the chamber and cairn pointed up to the Pleiades? How would a line between two points on the ground point directly up? Could you clarify that for me? Thanks!

  • @spider02540

    @spider02540

    2 жыл бұрын

    The line wouldn't point directly up it would point toward the horizon. He didn't show us the cairns but he mentioned they were on a hill on private property and he showed us the hill. From the mouth of the chamber their outlines would form peaks and notches along the top of the hill. As the Pleiades constellation rose over the horizon, certain stars would appear to rise from those points. Keep in mind the Indians in Massachusetts regularly burned the forest undergrowth, so these types of things would have been more visible than they are now. I have a book all about these chambers called Manitou, by James Mavor Jr and Byron Dix. The authors spent years researching and visiting several sites and took all kinds of measurements and made maps and diagrams. They found that many of the sites had a similar arrangement. Some type of chamber or observation point in a valley or on a hillside, and on a ridge or hill along the horizon a series of stone mounds or walls that roughly lined up with things like the Summer/winter solstice sunrise/sunset, or various stars and constellations. They used archaeoastronomy to estimate when the alignments would be perfect. I think at the Upton chamber they found that the Pleiades lined up with the cairns on the hill around 700-800 AD.

  • @CoolHistoryExplorers
    @CoolHistoryExplorers2 ай бұрын

    It's so fasninating to see inside of these chambers and imagine them as they were used in the past..

  • @randomperson8023
    @randomperson80232 жыл бұрын

    Amazing video

  • @wesleysullivan8047
    @wesleysullivan8047 Жыл бұрын

    great video thanks

  • @AdventureIreland
    @AdventureIreland3 ай бұрын

    The Upton chamber looks like many Irish domed burial chambers, the most famous of which is Newgrange, built 5,200 years ago (3,200 B.C.) which makes it older than Stonehenge and the Great Pyramids of Giza. The 19m passage (62ft) leads into a chamber with 3 alcoves. The passage and chamber are aligned with the rising sun on the mornings around the Winter Solstice. Like the Upton chamber, Newgrange's chamber is filled with light but on the Winter Solstice.

  • @michellenorthrup2059

    @michellenorthrup2059

    3 ай бұрын

    I thought the same thing! Very similar.

  • @ryelor123

    @ryelor123

    2 ай бұрын

    I think they were for tanning hides. That would be an essential 'industry' of people many hundreds of years ago and a large chamber that can be heated and smoke the hides could be useful. Due to the survivor bias, we only see the stone ones and not the wooden ones.

  • @sisterrose6830
    @sisterrose68304 ай бұрын

    You’re the bravest man on the internet I’ve seen . There is no way for any reason or amount of money I’d go in there . ❤

  • @Budrob998
    @Budrob998 Жыл бұрын

    I could show you some things in NH that would blow your minds

  • @jackherera8494

    @jackherera8494

    3 ай бұрын

    show me I want to find crystals so bad legit so bad

  • @virtualnewengland
    @virtualnewenglandАй бұрын

    Great video! I come across random things in the woods too. There’s a “cave” near the Fall River Freetown State Forest, at least, I thought it was a cave. I’ll have to go back and see if it’s one of these underground….things. Also, very brave of you to walk in the water with just sneakers!

  • @labSeta
    @labSeta2 жыл бұрын

    Well done ! Keep it up !

  • @aarongallant4280
    @aarongallant4280Ай бұрын

    I love how you framed this with the fake out wrap up

  • @bryanquick3349
    @bryanquick33492 жыл бұрын

    i remember going to mineral moutnain in leverett MA with my dad when i was a kid, there's a bunch of these up there, along with a hippy community and a pretty big buddha carved into a rock face. i hope all that's still there!

  • @Capillaries413

    @Capillaries413

    6 ай бұрын

    It is :-) but we are struggling to protect some of the lands with lesser known structures and cairns against logging :-(

  • @mikekennedy2965
    @mikekennedy29652 жыл бұрын

    According to Rodger Williams, the Narragansetts built their sweat lodges out of stone as in stone chambers.

  • @CricketGirrl

    @CricketGirrl

    5 ай бұрын

    Thank you! I was watching the video wondering why hundreds to thousands of years of aboriginal occupation was completely ignored.

  • @ryelor123

    @ryelor123

    2 ай бұрын

    Using them for tanning hides is probably more common. We have really bad tendency to attribute everything people did hundreds or thousands of years ago to ceremonies or religious events. In reality, they had to build practical structures too and places to dry meat or tan hides would've been all over the place. I'm sure these stone structures were build by piling up dirt and stones simultaneously until there's a rock-covered mound. Then rain and shovels removed the inside dirt leaving behind a structure that didn't require wooden false-work.

  • @sauercrowder

    @sauercrowder

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@CricketGirrl Yes, there's a bit of casual racism that seemed to be unconsciously slipped into this video, as there's an underlying implication that indigenous people didn't know how to build a structure out of stone.

  • @Xanrax
    @XanraxАй бұрын

    Great video I live in Vermont and I'm very interested in visiting these places.

  • @AWSMcube
    @AWSMcube Жыл бұрын

    You give off really strong boy scout vibes and I love it

  • @cryptoorchid
    @cryptoorchid2 жыл бұрын

    great job

  • @MrChristianDT
    @MrChristianDT5 ай бұрын

    It is Native American in origin, apparently. That wall leading right to it is another clue, as they say they used similar walls & signal trees to mark old Indian Paths. Not sure precisely what it's for, though, but it is a religious space of some sort.

  • @AndromedaCripps
    @AndromedaCrippsАй бұрын

    Woahhhhhhh the ending escalated quickly 👀

  • @catherinerheaume8522
    @catherinerheaume85222 ай бұрын

    Visit American Stonehenge in New Hampshire for actual Celtic ruins including celestial standing stones. Highly recommend summer solstice.

  • @user-qs7gx7rp7m
    @user-qs7gx7rp7m3 ай бұрын

    Great Stuff !

  • @kx250monster1023244
    @kx250monster1023244Ай бұрын

    i grew up in the area - havent been inside this chamber in about 25 years. amazing how different the outside looks, but the inside looks exactly the same.

  • @foggy561
    @foggy5612 жыл бұрын

    Found one of these while hiking near the small city of corinth in upstate NY. Very large chamber after a 50ft narrow passage way that snaked back and forth. Took my metal detector with me and had no evidence of metal anywhere inside.

  • @MrChristianDT

    @MrChristianDT

    5 ай бұрын

    There is allegedly one in Mill Creek Park in northeast Ohio, but it got too locally famous & the park rangers didn't trust it, didn't want anyone getting hurt trying to explore it & didn't want some aggressive animal that could hurt guests moving into it, so they had the entrance sealed off. But, the only known stone cairns in the area are in a completely different county, in the Grand River Nature Preserve.

  • @zodarian6705
    @zodarian67052 ай бұрын

    I was born and raised about a mile from the Upton cave. I knew there was one in town but I didn't know where until I was older. It was actually located on private property originally and when the owners passed away they donated it it is now called heritage Park if I remember

  • @RinoaL
    @RinoaL18 күн бұрын

    I'd make one of these to avoid the summer heat.

  • @jamestaylor3805
    @jamestaylor38052 ай бұрын

    Of the similar things I have encountered I can list root cellar, spring houses, temporary corpse storage(to await spring thaws) what ever the name for such things would be, livestock stableage, and one that may have previously been something else but had in the mid 1800s was used to store summers farming implements.

  • @DawnFrankHundley
    @DawnFrankHundley28 күн бұрын

    Loved it.

  • @CricketGirrl
    @CricketGirrl5 ай бұрын

    Um...the aboriginal peoples who lived in the area could easily have built them. There weren't just pre-Columbian Europeans. There were pre-Columbian indigenous tribes. These sites could easily have been picked clean of artifacts over the centuries.

  • @padraigmaclochlainn8866
    @padraigmaclochlainn886610 ай бұрын

    If you go to the Uxbridge SNETT chamber on a nice Sunday morning, you'll see so many friendly horse riders. Really feels like something out of a fantasy.

  • @davidwood2387
    @davidwood2387Ай бұрын

    In Millbury Massachusetts there is a rock tower in Millbury center . I believe it used to be higher .so they could see the Black Stone river .

  • @PeterAshmore
    @PeterAshmore Жыл бұрын

    It looks like some people tried to recreate Newgrange burial tomb or something along those lines. Maybe Irish settlers who travelled over with the English as a project or experiment? A Pagan enthusiast? Newgrange is bigger and pushes 6000 years old rather than 600 but the Ancient Irish used the sun and solstice to mark time in the quarter year used then. I live about 40 minuttes from Newgrange btw. PS Ireland is not part of the British Isles, we are very much an independent country. :)

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