Showing posts with label ohio mounds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ohio mounds. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 14, 2024

Ohio's Most Incredible Hidden Mound and Earthwork in Hocking County

 

Ohio's Most Incredible Hidden Mound and Earthwork in Hocking County

 A deep ditch surrounds the large burial mound with openings to all of the cardinal points. It is unlike any other mound in the Ohio Valley. About 50 feet to the south are the remains of a small henge. Take a visual tour of all of the largest burial mounds in Ohio. This burial mound sets in the field in front of the mound that is located on the ridge in the background www.nephilimgiants.net : Edith Ross Burial Mound in Hocking County, Ohio
This photo is looking north at the southern gateway into the burial mound. In the foreground is the embankment of the small henge to the south of the mound.

                
At the bottom of the hill is another burial mound that is called by the locals "The Top Hat mound." The small break in the trees at the top of the hill is the location of the large burial mound and henge.




Friday, October 6, 2023

Ohio Mound builder's Celtic Origins of Headhunting: Blood Offerings to Their Ancestral Spirits

 

Ohio Mound builder's Celtic Origins of Headhunting: Blood Offerings to Their Ancestral Spirits




Description of a headless skeleton at the Baum Works near Chillicothe, Ohio "Skeleton No. 15 was an adult male, placed in section 2, four feet above the baseline. The skeleton was headless, as shown in Fig. 8. However, a number of fine bone beads were taken from near the left shoulder. Upon the right arm were a number of well-wrought beads made of shell, one-fourth inch in diameter. Near the foot was placed two fine arrow-points made of chalcedony." Head-hunting, described in classical writings and in Irish texts, had also a sacrificial aspect. The heads of enemies were hung at the saddle-bow or fixed on spears, as the conquerors returned home with songs of victory.   Evidence that the Celts migrated to the Ohio Valley 
www.nephilimgiants.net : Celtic Invasions of the British Isles Pushes the Beaker People to the Ohio Valley
Burial place in a spoked (sun symbol) within a mound in Ohio.  Three of the skeletons had their heads placed between their legs.  What does this represent? The similarities between the ancestral, Sun and Lunar worship of the Celts is very similar to that of the Ohio Mound Builders that parallels may be conjectured as to headhunting.
      

   These customs had a religious aspect. In cutting off a head the Celt saluted the gods, and the head was offered to them or to ancestral spirits, and sometimes kept in grove or temple. The name was given to the heads of the slain in Ireland, the "mast of Macha," shows that they were dedicated to her, just as skulls found under an altar had been devoted to the Celtic Mars. Probably, as among Dayaks, American Indians, and others, possession of a head was a guarantee that the ghost of its owner would be subservient to its Celtic possessor, either in this world or in the next, since they are sometimes found buried in graves along with the dead. Or, suspended in temples, they became an actual and symbolical offering of the life of their owners, if, as is probable, the life or soul was thought to be in the head. Hence, too, the custom of drinking from the skull of the slain had the intention of transferring his powers directly to the drinker. Milk drunk from the skull of Conall Cernach restored to enfeebled warriors their pristine strength, and a folk-survival in the Highlands—that of drinking from the skull of a suicide (here taking the place of the slain enemy) in order to restore health—shows the same idea at work. All these practices had thus one end, that of the transference of spirit force—to the gods, to the victor who suspended the head from his house, and to all who drank from the skull. Represented in bas-relief on houses or carved on dagger-handles, the head may still have been thought to possess talismanic properties, giving power to house or weapon. Possibly this cult of human heads may have given rise to the idea of a divine head like those figured on Gaulish images, or describede.g., in the story of Bran. His head preserved the land from invasion until Arthur disinterred it, the story is based on the belief that heads or bodies of great warriors still had a powerful influence. The representation of the head of a god, like his whole image, would be thought to possess the same preservative power.



Monday, August 14, 2023

Dunns Pond Burial Mound in Logan County, Ohio

Dunns Pond Hopewell Sioux Burial Mound in Logan County, Ohio


 Dunns Pond, near the SE corner of Indian Lake, Logan County. It is situated overlooking a lake. We find this predominately on lakes in nortern Indiana and northwest Ohio. Another burial mound group is also located on a lake in northwest Ohio in Williams County, Ohio  www.nephilimgiants.net : Large Human Skeletons Discovered With the Shriveled Hand of a Child in Jay County, Indiana




Sunday, August 13, 2023

Dixon Adena Mound Builders Burial Mound in Licking County, Ohio

 

Dixon Adena Mound Builders Burial Mound in Licking County, Ohio


Also known as Williamson Mound. Located in Licking County on private property. This conical mound is 15 ft. high and 80 ft. in diameter. This is one of many burial mounds in Ohio that are "Address Restricted" meaning the location is not divulged. Until now, get directions to all of the burial mounds in Ohio with the Nephilim Travel Guide. More burial mounds in Licking County, Ohio. Her's a massive Adena mound located south of Newark, Ohio www.nephilimgiants.net : Large Skeletons Discovered in Stone Burial Mounds, South of the Newark, Ohio Earthworks



Thursday, July 27, 2023

Giant Monkey Men Buried with Panther in Cincinatti, Butler County, Ohio Burial Mound

 

Giant Monkey Men Buried with Panther in Cincinatti, Butler County, Ohio Burial Mound



Six burial mounds and earthworks can still be seen in Cincinnati.  Here is one in Norwood  www.nephilimgiants.net : Norwood Adena Burial Mound in Cincinnati, Ohio


Cambridge City, Indiana Tribune, September 26, 1889
RELICS IN OHIO MOUNDS
A Gigantic Man Buried Alongside a Panther
   Soon after the 1st of March I left for southern Ohio to collect relics to be placed on loan exhibition in the Smithsonian Institute at Washington, say a writer in the Cincinnati Commercial Gazette. During the last two moths eleven large mounds have been opened and their contents taken to museums and placed on exhibition. These mounds vary in height from eight to thirty feet, are generally conical in shape, and contain all the way from 300 to 10,000 square yards of dirt. They were built by the aborigines in this country hundreds of years ago to serve as burial places for the distinguished dead. They are generally placed near some stream in a valley and not infrequently on high points of land which commanded a good view of the country, but the larger ones are in the valleys. These mounds are usually composed of clay, sometimes of sand, and often have layers off charcoal or burnt clay in them. These layers are often as brightly colored as if they had been painted.
    The first mound opened was on rather high ground, the third river terrace. This mound was 13 feet high, 60 feet wide and 110 feet long. It took six men eight days to dig through. When about twenty feet from the eastern edge we came upon a thick layer of burned bone. The layer was six inches thick and the width of the trench. The ashes of which it was composed were either resultant from animal or human bones, we could not tell which, but at any rate, whether animal or human, it must have taken thirty or forty skeletons (if cremated) to have made that many ashes.
    About five feet above this layer, or nine feet from the summit of the mound, was a skeleton of a very large individual which had buried by the side of it the bones of a panther. Whether the person had killed the panther and it was buried with him as an honor or whether the panther had killed the individual I can not say. This much however, can be said, that in forty-three opened no find of this nature has been made. It is therefore quit interesting and important. The skull of the panther was very large, teeth very long and sharp. It would take a mound builder of a great deal of nerve to attack a beast of this size if he had nothing but a stone hatchet and bow and arrows to defend himself with. So if he did kill the panther he certainly entitled to a great deal of credit.

   Upon opening the large mound last fall, skeletons were discovered. Little attention was given to the bones which soon crumbled. When another mound was opened a few days ago, however, the excavators were struck by the peculiar cranial characteristics. The heads presumably those of men are very much larger than those of present day men. From directly over the eye socket the head slopes straight back, and the nasal bones protrude far above the cheekbones.

The jawbones are so long and pointed that one is struck with their resemblance to those of a monkey. The teeth in the front of the jaw resemble the molars in the mouths of persons today

Tuesday, July 25, 2023

Forensic Anthropologist Declares Circleville Skull Caucasian: Until Its Origin is Revealed

 

Forensic Anthropologist Declares Circleville Skull 

Caucasian: Until Its Origin is Revealed

"Skull found within a burial mound at Circleville, Ohio. I sent this photo to a leading physical anthropologists asking him to identify the skull, he responded that the skull had “Caucasian attributes.” When I told him the origin of the skull, he recanted his original analysis."  "The Encyclopedia of Ancient Giants in North America."

Burial mound next to the Circleville earthwork where the skeleton was discovered.
The earthwork that is a circle and square is of equal areas, meaning that it's builders knew how to square a circle, mathematically. The knowledge that originated with the accounted giants in the Bible known as the Amorites: an Indo European people.  Everything matches us, except for the truth.




Wednesday, July 12, 2023

Skeleton of "Enormous Dimensions" Found with Amorite Tablet in Muskingum County, Ohio

 

Skeleton of "Enormous Dimensions" Found with Amorite Tablet in Muskingum County, Ohio



This tablet was found in another mound in Muskingum County, Ohio.  The tablet described below may have been similar with Amorite cup marks. It was believed that the first two symbols were the Alpha and Omega, meaning the "beginning and end." The single cup mark in the center was used by the Amorite giants to signify the 'One Sun God' or 'Holy Father.' The mound contained five giant skeletons that were all over 9 1/2 feet or taller. It is the largest skeletons found in Ohio.  For a mpa of the locations of all of Ohio's giants www.nephilimgiants.net : Map of Nephilim Giants Discovered in Ohio: 125 Historical Accounts


The American Antiquarian, Volume 3, 1857
     A Slab of Sandstone Containing Hieroglyphics. — During some extensive mound explorations near Zanesville, Ohio, under the direction of Dr. Everhart, of that city, a somewhat remarkable stone was found. It is a slab of sandstone, 12£ inches long, 11 inches wide, 4 inches thick, and containing two lines of hieroglyphics across its face. The slab was found leaning against the head of a clay coffin, at the bottom of a large mound. The coffin was made of clay, molded by hand, flat at the bottom, straight on the sides, but arched over the top, and contained a skeleton which is reported to have been of enormous dimensions. The description of the stone and of the hieroglyphics was read at the last session of the American Association, and the slab placed on exhibition. It has been pronounced "very puzzling." It contains among the hieroglyphics certain signs which are quite similar to some on the Davenport Tablets.



Tuesday, May 23, 2023

Gematria Numerology and the Length of 1050 Feet: What Does it Mean?

 

Gematria Numerology and the Length of 1050 Feet: What Does it Mean?



1050 works within the mumerology of the Babylonian numerological codex of Gematria. See how here www.nephilimgiants.net : Nephilim Gematria Numerology and the Washington Monument 555 and 666



The Seal Township Earthwork's circle, along with Hopeton's, Highbanks and Newark were all 1050 feet in diameter.  The number 1050 can be broken down to 210 X 5 = 1050
The importance of the length of 210 was that 210 X pi = 660 feet. Learn about the Gematria numerology at the Rock Mill site in Ohio here  


The length of 210 feet shows up most commonly in the diameter of Solar Temples, called henges.      210 X pi = 660.


Larger view of the North Fork Works shows how the length of 240 was incorporated into the construction of the earthwork sites. Note how you can get the length of 660 by taking 210 X pi or by addiing the earthworks themselves.  210 + 210 + 240 = 660!



6 X 6 X 6 = 216


North of the Seal Township earthworks was the Sacred Via at Piketon. The Piketon Sacred Via was 1080 feet in length. 1080 was the Gematria number for the Earth Mother. These earthen walls were attached to the earthwork. 
420 + 240 = 660
420 + 420 + 240 = 1080
212 X  Pi = 666
1080 + 1080 = 2160






Monday, May 15, 2023

The Adena Mound Located Near Coshocton, Ohio

 

The Adena Mound Located Near Coshocton, Ohio


The Porteus mound is still visible today, a few miles from Coshocton, Ohio.  Photo from, "The Nephilim Chronicles: A Travel Guide to the Ancient Ruins in the Ohio Valley." For 121 photos of burial mounds and earthworks in Ohio www.nephilimgiants.net : 121 Photos of Burial Mounds in Ohio Including the :Address Restricted" Sites

Centennial History of Coshocton County, Ohio, Volume 1, 1909

     The Porteus farm revealed charcoal traces, a few pottery fragments, flint chips, small bones, a trinket or ceremonial of lead, and a finely chipped spear-head six inches long. This was the extent of the discovery, "to our chagrin," as the archaeologist reports, "after exceedingly laborious and dangerous excavation." The report states that no larger force of workmen was ever put on a mound in the Ohio Valley. "Sixteen men were employed day and night for four days in sinking a trench thirty-five feet wide and seventy feet long. The sides were loose and dangerous, and heavy bracing was necessary. No burials were discovered, although tunnels were run several yards on the baseline in various directions. This was disappointing, especially after the expenditure of a large sum of money. However, we learn again that it is not always the largest and most imposing monument which contains the greatest treasure. Failure to find anything cannot be charged to imperfect or hasty examination — the whole center of the mound was exposed by the trench and tunnels for a               distance of thirty by twenty-five feet. As it was desirable to restore the monument to its former shape, we engaged Mr. Porteus to fill our trench." Composed entirely of earth and unstratified this mound suggests the question of how much the rains of ages may have reduced the height, possibly from a towering structure to the present pile of twenty-three feet. There is also a query, in connection with mound excavating in general, as to whether or not the practice of digging to the present base line may be stopping short of discoveries farther down. The Porteus mound crowds the Muskingum bank so closely that the riverside drive has cut the side of the mound. It is one of the very few earthworks found on the last of the river terraces to be re claimed from the stream, suggesting that it was among the last constructions of the Moundbuilders. Whether intended as a monument in connection with the ancient cemetery it overlooks, or possibly as a signal station, is another Moundbuilder mystery.

Old photo of the Porteus mound soon after its excavation by the Ohio Historical Society. I t was the general rule to not restore the mounds.


Monday, December 5, 2022

Address Restricted? I Don't Think So. Four of the Largest Adena Burial Mounds in Ohio hidden from the public by the Ohio Historical Society. Not anymore!

 Address Restricted? I Don't Think So. Four of the Largest Adena Burial Mounds in Ohio hidden from the public by the Ohio Historical Society. Not anymore!



This large Adena burial mound is near Chillicothe, Ohio. To see how many locations of mounds that the Ohio Historical society makes public opposed to how many there are see this, see the mounds in Butler County, Ohio. To see a Ohio map which shows how many giants were found in each county.www.nephilimgiants.net : Map of Nephilim Giants Discovered in Ohio: 125 Historical Accounts  


This Adena burial mound is not too far from the famous Serpent Mound.


This massive Adena burial mound is near the Tarleton Cross.


This large Adena burial mound is north of Cincinnati, Ohio  There are  25 large burial mounds in Ohio that are classified as "Address Restricted."  Get the directions to all of them for the first time. If you want to see photos of these mounds, they are posted here 



Sunday, November 27, 2022

Ross County's Stone Serpent Mound Visible From Spruce Hill Stone Ceremonial Work

 

Ross County's Stone Serpent Mound Visible From Spruce Hill Stone Ceremonial Work




This stone serpentine work was located at the bottom of the bluff below Spruce Hill and to the east of the Baum ceremonial earthwork.  No remains of this serpent have been located.   UFO sighted just to the west of the of this earthwork at the Seip mound. www.nephilimgiants.net : Triangular UFO Sighted Over the Seip Geometric Earthwork and Mounds in Ohio



Tuesday, November 22, 2022

Newark Ohio Earthwork Complex Photo Essay

 

Newark Ohio Earthwork Complex Photo Essay


Map of the Newark, Ohio Adena Hopewell Earthwork Complex. A surveyor I recently takled at the site said that the buiders would have had to have known trigonometry to construct these works. What Native American tribes knew trigonometry?




      The very extensive and complicated series of works here presented occur at the junction of the South and Raccoon forks of Licking river, one mile west of the town of Newark, Licking County, Ohio. Like those at Marietta, the works in question occupy a high fertile plain. This plain is here of great extent and elevated from thirty to fifty feet above the alluvial bordering the streams: it is for the most part level, but in places broken and undulating.
      These works are so complicated, that it is impossible to give anything like a comprehensible description of them. The plan, with the illustrative supplementary plans and sections, will furnish a better conception, as a whole and in detail, than could be afforded in any other way. It will be the object of the text to supply such information as cannot be obtained from the plan.
      The group covers an extent of about two miles square, and consists, as will be observed, of three grand divisions, connected by parallels and works of a minor character. The walls of the parallels, and of the irregular portions of the works generally, as well as of the small circles, (of which there are a considerable number,) are very slight; for the most part not exceeding four feet in height. The embankments of the principal, or regular portions of the works, are much heavier. Those of the larger circular work, E, are about twelve feet in perpendicular height by fifty feet base and have an interior ditch seven feet deep by thirty-five wide. At the gateway or entrance, the walls are much higher than at any other point, being not less than sixteen feet in altitude, with a ditch thirteen feet deep, giving an absolute height of about thirty feet from the bottom of the ditch to the top of the embankment. The wall of the lesser circle, F, is six feet in height, and is unaccompanied by a ditch. The walls of the octagonal, as well as of the square work, are but five and a half feet high, and are also destitute of ditches, either exterior or interior.


Gateway of the massive henge at Newark, Ohio that is aligned to the May 1 sunrise.
      The circular structure E  is undoubtedly one of the best preserved and most imposing in the State. There are many enclosing larger areas, but none more clearly defined. At the entrance, which is towards the east, the ends of the walls curve outwards, for the distance of a hundred feet, leaving a passageway eighty feet wide, between the deep ditches on either hand. Here, covered with the gigantic trees of a primitive forest, the work presents a truly grand and impressive appearance; and, in entering the ancient avenue for the first time, the visitor does not fail to experience a sensation of awe, such as he might feel in passing the portals of an Egyptian temple, or in gazing upon the silent ruins of Petra of the desert. This work is not, as has been generally represented, a true circle; its form is that of an ellipse, its diameters being twelve hundred and fifty feet, and eleven hundred and fifty feet respectively. There are two or three slight irregularities in the outline, too trifling however to be indicated in the plan. The area of the enclosure is something over thirty acres. It is an almost perfect level, and is still covered with the original forest. Immediately in the centre of the area is a mound of a singular shape, of which an enlarged plan, Fig. 12, is here given. It much resembles some of the "animal-shaped mounds" of Wisconsin and was probably designed to represent a bird with expanded wings. It can hardly be called a mound but is rather a group of four, so arranged and connected as to constitute an unbroken outline.
Bird effigy burial mound located in the center of the henge and aligned to the May 1st sunrise.  The bird representing "transition" from the winter to the spring.  


    Denominating the figure, for the sake of distinction, a bird, the dimensions are as follows: Length of body, one hundred and fifty-five feet; of each wing, one hundred and ten feet; between the tips of the wings, measuring in a right line, two hundred feet; width of body, sixty-three feet; of wings, in centre, forty-five feet; of same, next the body, forty feet; height of mounds composing the body, seven feet; of mounds composing the wings, five feet. The head of the bird points directly towards the entrance of the enclosure. The bearing of the body is S. 65° E. Immediately in the rear of the effigy, and one hundred feet distant, is a semi-circular embankment, about two hundred feet in length; it is but slightly elevated, and can hardly be traced; it is nevertheless exhibited in the plan The long mound constituting the body of the bird, has been opened. Upon examining the excavation, it was found that the structure had originally contained an altar: whether any relics were found upon it, is unknown. This feature, in conjunction with others, seems to point out a religious or superstitious design to this individual structure, if not to the whole group of works with which it is connected.








      Passing over the intermediate intricate works, of which it would be futile to attempt a description, we come to the octagon and its dependencies. The angles of this octagon, it will be observed, are not coincident, although its sides are very nearly equal. At each of the angles is a gateway, which is covered upon the interior by a small, truncated pyramidal elevation, (Fig. 14,) five feet in height, and measuring eighty by one hundred feet at the base. These are placed about sixty feet interior to the walls. The area of this work, which is a rich and beautiful level, is something over fifty acres. 

One segment of the octagon wall with the interior mound with the interior mound visible to the left.


     Connected with the octagon by parallels three hundred feet long, and placed sixty feet apart, is the smaller circle F. Unlike the other circular work, this is a true circle, two thousand eight hundred and eighty feet, or upwards of half a mile in circumference. It encloses no mounds, but possesses a remarkable feature in the line of the wall, at a point immediately opposite the entrance. This consists of a crown work, (Fig. 15,) which is wholly unlike anything heretofore noticed. It would almost seem that the builders had originally determined to carry out parallel lines from this point; but after proceeding one hundred feet, had suddenly changed their minds and finished the enclosure, by throwing an immense mound across the uncompleted parts. This mound, which may be taken as constituting a part of the wall of the enclosure, is one hundred and seventy feet long, eight feet higher than the general line of the embankment, and overlooks the entire work. It has been called the "Observatory," from this fact: it probably had some other purpose than that of a look-out, but what purpose, it is not undertaken to say. It has been pretty thoroughly excavated, but the excavations seem to have disclosed nothing, except an abundance of rough stones, which must have been brought from the creek or some other remote locality, as none are scattered over the remarkable plain upon which these works are situated.

The circle at Newark that is attached to the octagon with what is called the "Observatory" mound.




From the octagon lead off three lines of parallel walls: those extending towards the south have been traced for nearly two miles, and finally lose themselves in the plain; the remaining parallels terminate as shown in the plan. They are upwards of a mile in length. The walls composing these singular lines are placed, about two hundred feet apart, and are parallel throughout. A singular feature occurs in the northern one, which is exhibited by the transverse section g h. For the space of a quarter of a mile, an advantage is taken of a slight natural ridge to construct between the walls a broad embankment, something higher than the parallels themselves. 

One small segment of one of the parallel walls is all that remains of this sacred via that has been conjectured to have run all the way to Chillicothe, 60 miles distant.



      It is broad enough to permit fifty persons to walk abreast. A similar peculiarity is observed in the short parallel leading from the square enclosure towards the great circle E, and is exhibited by the section i l. A feature somewhat analogous occurs within the parallels extending from the irregular works on the extreme right of the plan. This parallel is carried down the bank of the third terrace, which is here fifteen or twenty feet high. Within the lines, the bank is cut down, and regularly graded to an easy ascent. The pathway or road, for a portion of its extent upon the alluvions, is elevated above the walls, as shown in longitudinal section m n. A similar grade is constructed at the extremity of the northern parallel, where the natural bank is much higher than at any other point. Here the bank is excavated inwardly, for upwards of one hundred and fifty feet; and a portion of the earth is appropriated to form an elevated way over the low swampy ground immediately at the foot of the terrace. These excavations constitute quite imposing features, when viewed on the spot, but are hardly distinguishable upon the plan.
One of the parallel walls can be seen outside of the large henge running towards the square enclosure.


    A number of small circles are found connected with the works and are chiefly embraced in the area between the two principal parallels. They are about eighty feet in diameter, without gateways opening into them; and it has been suggested that they probably mark the sites of ancient circular dwellings. The circles indicated by the letter G are of much larger dimensions and are characterized by ditches interior to their walls. They each have a diameter of about two hundred feet, and have elevated embankments constructed interior to the ditch, as seen in the plan. This peculiarity has been already remarked, in some of the works of the Scioto Valley.


A small circle with a serpentine gateway is situated outside of the octagon.

      Upon the lower terraces, towards the point of junction between the South and Raccoon forks, a great number of mounds of various sizes are situated. Some are large, but for the most part they are small. A small truncated pyramid once existed here, but the construction of the Ohio canal, and the subsequent establishment of the village of Lockport at this point, have obliterated this as well as numerous other mounds. Indeed, these causes have resulted in the almost total destruction of the singular maze of embankments, which communicates directly with the square enclosure. The ancient lines can now be traced only at intervals, among gardens and outhouses. At the period when the original survey, upon which this plan is constructed, was made, which is twelve years ago, the lines could all be made out. A few years hence, the residents upon the spot will be compelled to resort to this map, to ascertain the character of the works which occupied the very ground upon which they stand.
     Within the area partially enclosed by this series of works, was formerly a large natural pond, covering upwards of one hundred acres. It has been drained, so that the greater portion is under cultivation. Previous to the earthquake of 1811, which resulted in the destruction of New Madrid on the Mississippi, it is said but little water was contained in the basin; after that event it rose to the depth of ten feet, and retained that level until the drainage took place. It has been suggested that it owed its origin to artificial excavation; but it is incontestibly natural, like several other smaller depressions in the vicinity, which still contain water. Excavations, denominated "wells," from which the materials for the construction of the wall were taken, are abundant in the neighborhood of these works.
      Several extraordinary coincidences are exhibited between the details of these works and some of those already described. The smaller circle F is nearly identical in size with that belonging to the "Hopeton Works," and with the one attached to the octagon, in the "High Bank" group. The works last named are situated upon the Scioto, seventy miles distant. The square has also the same area with the rectangle belonging to the Hopeton, and with the octagon attached to the High Bank Works. The octagon, too, has the same area with the large, irregular square at Marietta. 


Two of the walls of the square work at Newark, Ohio are still visible


     The small circles G, G, G, betray a coincidence with those in connection with the works above mentioned, which ought not to be overlooked. It is not to be supposed that these numerous coincidences are the result of an accident.
       It would be unprofitable to indulge in speculations as to the probable origin and purposes of this group of works. That it could not have been designed for defense, seems too obvious to admit of doubt.  The reasons urged against the hypothesis of a defensive origin in the Marietta works apply with double force here. The structure which, from the height and solidity of its walls, would seem best adapted for defense, has its ditch interior to the embankment,—a blunder which no people possessing the skill and judgment displayed in the defensive works of the mound-builders, would be apt to commit.
      Hill works, incontestibly of a defensive origin, occur within four or five miles of this group, the relative positions of which are indicated by the "Map of six miles of the Newark Valley." About four miles distant, and overlooking those works, is placed, upon the summit of a high hill, a gigantic effigy of some animal, probably the alligator. Of this remarkable structure a plan is presented on a subsequent page. Around these works, in the valley and crowning the hills bordering it, are numerous mounds, all of which, as compared with those of the Scioto, are singularly broad and flat. Many of them have been opened, but no account has been preserved of their character. So far as could be ascertained from diligent inquiry, they do not essentially differ in their contents from those found elsewhere in the State. Fifteen or twenty miles to the northward of these works, are others of an interesting character, which have never been investigated, and of which no public notice has yet been taken.