Fordtrucksrule
Full Member
- Sep 28, 2018
- 129
- 219
- Primary Interest:
- All Treasure Hunting
Thank you sandy1 for everything!!!
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Do you know this stone as an egg?It has always amazed me of the engineering that went into the sites SS, and how they were constructed and how they were able to move the monuments in to place.Thank you so much for sharing your site.View attachment 2176050
Do I know it as an egg please explain Sir. I believe what you don’t understand is here in the Western United States. We’re in a time frame from say the 1600s to the 1800s. I believe where you’re at in Iran you’re dealing with ancient.Do you know this stone as an egg?
Yes it is very common to see an owl carved on different markers, the ears are very common however sometimes it is just the beak/face/eyes such as this one below (this is on the large Duck and Eagle marker I posted before)I think I might see an owl in your pic there.View attachment 2176157
Hello Sandy. Do the owls get smaller and more secretive as we get closer to the dig site?Yes it is very common to see an owl carved on different markers, the ears are very common however sometimes it is just the beak/face/eyes such as this one below (this is on the large Duck and Eagle marker I posted before) View attachment 2176159
No, as you get near the cache the owls can be large or small it really depends on the time period, older cache sites have much larger owls while the later (1700-1800s) they started making them smaller in my case down to about a foot in size if they are a full bodied owl and even smaller if they are just a partial such as just the head or an outline.Hello Sandy. Do the owls get smaller and more secretive as we get closer to the dig site?