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Stone Panels of Clover Hollow --Wondrous Freaks of Nature or Cryptic Messages from the Ancient Past?

Stone Panels of Clover Hollow --Wondrous Freaks of Nature or Cryptic Messages from the Ancient Past?

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A paradox of unparalleled proportion is coming to life on the side of Clover Hollow Mountain. The first clues suggesting an ancient civilization might have once existed here comes in the way of high resolution photographic evidence of stone panels that are abstract, creative, unique, artistic, clever, crumbling, and alien in nature. The conundrum we are faced with here is whether we recognize these numerous stone panels as one-hundred percent natural and just randomly occurring in this one spot, or are we looking at bizarre and cryptic pieces of art created by an ancient culture of unknown origin?

Pareidolia

To get a clearer picture on what might be happening in Clover Hollow, we need to understand the phenomena of pareidolia. Wikipedia defines pareidolia as follows: ‘Pareidolia (parr-i-doh-lee-ə) is a psychological phenomenon involving a vague and random stimulus (often an image or sound) being perceived as significant, a form of apophenia.’ A common example includes seeing images of animals or faces in clouds, the man in the Moon, the Moon Rabbit, and hearing hidden messages on records when played in reverse.

Pareidolia is a type of apophenia -- seeing patterns in random data. This definition implies that the phenomenon of pareidolia is a delusional behavior. You are not really seeing these images; they are just figments of your imagination made from random data. There are a number of theories as to the cause of this phenomenon. Experts say pareidolia provides a psychological determination for many delusions that involve the senses. They believe pareidolia could be behind numerous sightings of UFOs, Elvis, the Loch Ness Monster, and the hearing of disturbing messages on records when they are played backwards. Pareidolia often has religious overtones. A study in Finland found that people who are religious or believe strongly in the supernatural, are more likely to see faces in lifeless objects and landscapes.

Example of Pareidolia from the Galapagos Islands

Example of Pareidolia from the Galapagos Islands

Falkor over Saksayhuaman

Falkor over Saksayhuaman

Carl Sagan, the American cosmologist and author, made the case that pareidolia was a survival tool. In his 1995 book, ‘The Demon-Haunted World – Science as a Candle in the Dark,’ argued that this ability to recognize faces from a distance or in poor visibility was an important survival technique. While this instinct enables humans to instantly judge whether an oncoming person is a friend or foe, Sagan noted that it could result in some misinterpretation of random images or patterns of light and shade as being faces.

Sagan claimed that the human tendency to see faces in tortillas, clouds, cinnamon buns, and the like, is an evolutionary trait. He writes: ‘As soon as the infant can see, it recognizes faces, and we now know that this skill is hardwired in our brains. Those infants who a million years ago were unable to recognize a face smiled back less, were less likely to win the hearts of their parents, and less likely to prosper. These days, nearly every infant is quick to identify a human face, and to respond with a goony grin.’

Leonardo Da Vinci wrote about pareidolia as an artistic device. ‘if you look at any walls spotted with various stains, or with a mixture of different kinds of stones, if you are about to invent some scene, you will be able to see in it a resemblance to various different landscapes adorned with mountains, rivers, rocks, trees, plains, wide valleys, and various groups of hills.’ He’s talking about using your mind as a tool to increase your imagination and creativity. This may be sage advice when taking a look at what is going on in Clover Hollow. Try to imagine each of the following panels as creations of art with images within images. Start with the entire image and break it down into smaller components each telling their own story. ‘It’s all about faces.’

Rock cuts or possible petroglyphs

Rock cuts or possible petroglyphs

Stone Panels

Clover Hollow is mostly limestone karst jutting from the ground and covering the steep mountainside. Karst is a landscape formed from the dissolution of soluble rocks including limestone, where the hardest of the lithographic rock remains. The first rock megalith that stood out in Clover Hollow was on the cliffside standing there as if it were a sentry or guard post for the ancient Native American trail that passes in front. You could stare at these rock formations twenty-four hours every day, from every angle, and never see the artistic masterpiece that lay in front of you. The secret was to capture a single moment of time on a photograph, from the exact point of view when the sudden thrill of understanding slaps you across the face. Once you experience this moment of revelation, all the pieces of art distributed across the mountainside sharpen into focus. Also noticeable is the crumbling effect of erosion that has taken place since the Appalachian Mountain building process began millions of years ago.

Rock cuts or possible petroglyphs

Rock cuts or possible petroglyphs

Images within Images

Images within Images

The Faces of Clover Hollow

Every rock outcropping uncovered, exhibits a similar artistic approach and expression of overall method, which seems to primarily depend on the original, natural shape of the rock. Large panels, or sections of rock, are completely covered with petroglyphs that exhibit weird, abstract, and complex stone work that completely confuses the senses. Searching for faces and animal shapes in every configuration seems to help unravel the modus operandi of the ancient artist.

Rock Cuts or possible petroglyphs

Rock Cuts or possible petroglyphs

Close-up

Close-up

M. C. Esher like

M. C. Esher like

Alien Face-off

Alien Face-off

Creative by Design

All of the stone panels are showing similar technique and design focusing on the creative and abstract more so than typical technological influences seen elsewhere. If these are all naturally occurring rock cuts, a substantial argument can be made that there must be a divine consciousness behind the design of Mother Nature.

There is one stone panel in particular that sits on a cliffside overhang that was only seen through a zoom lens and a high resolution full frame camera and it stands out a bit from all the rest. It appears to have multiple cultural influences and may be more than one ancient civilization on top of another. Its going to take better scholars than myself to figure this one out.

Rock cuts or possible petroglyphs

Rock cuts or possible petroglyphs

Messages from the Past

The energy emanating from the Appalachian mountainside is palpable. You can’t help to notice that what lays before you must have something to do with the hidden vibration you feel deep inside your bones. When the epiphany of discovery rushes over you at the exact moment the twisted cuts of rock morph into a giant face of faces gazing toward the sky, you understand with extreme clarity exactly what the ancient artist was trying to express a very long time ago. You have now effectively communicated one on one and face to face with the ancient past.

Face of faces

Face of faces

Dave Miller is author of the book  The Sibold Effect: Beyond Science, History, Ghosts, and the Appalachian Supernatural . Find out more at his website   TheSiboldEffect.com 

Be sure to read more about Clover Hollow in Dave Miller’s Ancient Origins article, The Lost Tribe of Clover Hollow – Oldest Civilization in the World Found in Appalachian Mountains?

All Images courtesy © Dave Miller

By Dave Miller

 

Comments

LadyGreenEyes's picture

In a couple of the photos, there are “faces” in the rocks, but these look no more carved than do the various things we can sometimes see int he clouds.  I won’t say they aren’t carved, just that it seems unlikely.  Most of the photos look like ricks, and even searching for fun faces, I can’t see anything in the majority.  That said, I do believe there were people in the Americas far earlier than most scientists claim.  The mountains in that art of the country are very old, and have a mysterious feel that’s difficult to describe.  Special place. 

LGE

I don't see any images or hints in these rocks. But yes scientifically there are several graphical architectures made on natural rocks.

Dave Miller's picture

Yes, I believe in the paranormal. My book “The Sibold Effect” connects the paranormal to the rock carvings in Clover Hollow. I would love to see your photograph. Check out my website www.thesiboldeffect.com.

Dave Miller

Mr. Miller Do you believe in the paranormal also? I have a picture taken in Clover Hollow just last week I would like you to take a look at. There just happens to be something in the photograph that looks very similar to one of your rock photographs.

Tsurugi's picture

No. The mainstream scientific community says there are no carved shapes. I’m just commenting on the fact that I have never been able to see the shapes myself, not sure why. But just because I can’t personally see them doesn’t mean they aren’t there.

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Dave Miller's picture

Dave

Dave Miller spent every summer as a kid playing in the caves surrounding Greenville, West Virginia, deep in the Appalachian Mountains. This instilled in him a lifelong path chasing adventure and encounters with wild animals, all the while studying ancient... Read More

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