New England stone walls lie at the intersection of history, archaeology, ecology and geoscience, and deserve a science of their own
- Written by Robert M. Thorson, Professor of Earth Science, University of Connecticut
A typical New England stone wall in Hebron, Conn.Robert M. Thorson, CC BY-NDThe abandoned fieldstone walls of New England are every bit as iconic to the region as lobster pots, town greens, sap buckets and fall foliage. They seem to be everywhere – a latticework of dry, lichen-crusted stone ridges separating a patchwork of otherwise moist...












