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  1. Spung-Man

    Not the Blue Hole Again ?

    There is a report in the American Geophysical Union blogosphere about the Inskip blue hole: The Inskip Sinkhole http://blogs.agu.org/landslideblog/2015/09/29/the-inskip-sinkhole-1/ "...this is not in fact a sinkhole, but is undoubtedly a submarine landslide" You say "tomato," I say "tomato." S-M
  2. Spung-Man

    NASA to reveal major Mars finding tomorrow...

    The water they are talking about on Mars would be a thick cold soupy brine, which has the ability to melt at very cold temperatures yet still has potential for extremophile life. I presented during the 3rd Conference on Terrestrial Mars Analogs in Marrakech to propose that the NJ Pine Barrens...
  3. Spung-Man

    "Supermoon" lunar eclipse coming

    The sky cleared and the daughter and I watched in awe from our Richland backyard. S-M
  4. Spung-Man

    Cumberland County Stones

    This is the old, old Egg Harbor that was referring to a region way before Egg Harbor City was founded. Its bounds covered southern Ocean and eastern Atlantic Counties. The first ethnic enclave of New Germany or Germantown or Woolyfield (c.1848) encompassed Folsom and Newtonville along the...
  5. Spung-Man

    Cumberland County Stones

    While in Blackman (1880: 185), I found this reference to pine knots that reminded me of your post! She's talking about the first European settlers of Egg Harbor (early eighteenth century), a territorial designation that included Little Egg Harbor. At this stage of time the farmers had plenty of...
  6. Spung-Man

    The Sale of Atsion Furnace

    I'm not sure if the was made clear, but the dams and canals were all made by beaver, not man.
  7. Spung-Man

    History of Mizpah

    Like most Pinelands hamlets, there is little known about the area's early history. Mizpah is on the Cohansey trail, a very ancient and important aboriginal byway that began at then Cohansey (now Greenwich) and crossed the Long-A-Coming trail at the Lochs-of-the-Swamp at the Steelman Plantation...
  8. Spung-Man

    The Sale of Atsion Furnace

    Before cranberries the drained lands were used mostly for cattle pasturage (savannah) and rough hay production without infill. Also, meadow ore, an early name for bog ore, could be more easily extracted. "In the northern part of the county, between Atsion and Batsto, another system appears to...
  9. Spung-Man

    Lock's Bridge

    I Googled William Heulings and this early survey reference popped up. Nelson, William. (2013). New Jersey Biographical and Genealogical Notes from the Volumes of the New Jersey Archives (Vol. 9). London: Forgotten Books. (Original work published 1916)...
  10. Spung-Man

    Denali is Now!

    the sound of silence... while I have another cup of tea, semi-fermented.
  11. Spung-Man

    Lock's Bridge

    Thanks TJ! I'm still trying to figure out West Mill. Are there two ancient mills operating within two miles of each other – Sleepy and West? What is the earliest references we have for each? According to the Pennsylvania Gazette advertisement the saw mill for sale is in ruins by 1782, although...
  12. Spung-Man

    Lock's Bridge

    TJ, Could the ruins of an old sawmill and iron work "on one of the branches" be West's Mill? I've updated an older post of the historic map with new annotation for discussion. Added are possible inn sites where Shinn might have served applejack, each with watering holes (spungs). In...
  13. Spung-Man

    Tavern in Pleasant Mills, NJ

    Back to the Sailor Boy Tavern, its survey can be found in Clement (Volume 3, page 14, Historical Society of Pennsylvania). The Road to Weymouth is called the Gloucester Road (above). I suspect New Old Egg Harbor and Old Old Egg Harbor Roads are later straightened iterations of the original Old...
  14. Spung-Man

    Lock's Bridge

    I just realized that the Clement's Maps & Surveys have been reproduced on-line at the West Jersey History Project site. Click on the map icon in the center to access all seven volumes for interesting views of Camden, Burlington, Gloucester, and Atlantic Counties. Thank you Relayer...
  15. Spung-Man

    Cumberland County Stones

    Residents wary after human remains found in Richland http://www.pressofatlanticcity.com/news/residents-wary-after-human-remains-found-in-richland/article_c8f842da-5e63-11e5-8745-7b558af8b286.html I have been threatened, harassed, and accosted on various occasions for my anti sewer and...
  16. Spung-Man

    Cumberland County Stones

    That is the third mortality in a decade within 50-feet of my place. I should move to a safer place. Were you thinking of Camden or Atlantic City? S-M
  17. Spung-Man

    Lock's Bridge

    We know western Atlantic County has a fascinating iron industry legacy, but what predated the furnace land-use? Here’s Clement’s (Volume 3, page 83, Historical Society of Pennsylvania) “Map of Cedar Swamp in the Great Swamp near the “Jorden Place” owned? by Coopers–Evans–?–Shin etc. on maps in...
  18. Spung-Man

    Cumberland County Stones

    Remember my siding? Human remains found in Richland BUENA VISTA Human remains were discovered near railroad tracks running through a wooded area in the southern portion of Richland Village, New Jersey State Police told The Daily Journal on Thursday afternoon...
  19. Spung-Man

    Lock's Bridge

    No, I'm circling the Vineland Railroad and the Vineland cranberry lands for emphasis. I had heard that the area marked Vineland Cranberry Company had planted high. I'll query my source again. Landis was wildly successful with Vineland, and everybody copied him. I'm wondering how much of a role...
  20. Spung-Man

    Lock's Bridge

    It is stated in Landis(?) (1855: 14–15, Practical Hints at a Glance Upon Farming: Written for the Weymouth Stockholders) that: “The Cranberry is an article which is now beginning to receive the attention it deserves; it has long been of the opinion that they flourish better in low marshy land...
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