Here I note the positions of three strangely placed glacial stones. I see many cases of stones that have been closely placed side by side with distant stones placed in the between them. In this case I took an azimuth reading of the distant stone and noted an azimuth bearing of 165 degrees. This was taken standing between the two stones in the front. There is nothing significant I could readily find about 165 degrees and its back azimuth of 345 degrees. I used one moon azimuth calculator and got the following data for azimuths close to 165 degrees:
Dtate Time Altitude Azimuth
2018/04/01 0:00:00 43 45 05 169 03 48
2018/05/01 0:00:00 32 31 25 166 42 11
2018/05/31 0:00:00 25 45 12 163 07 27
2018/06/29 0:00:00 26 28 40 169 57 38
2018/09/26 0:00:00 48 55 10 166 45 23
2018/11/24 0:00:00 66 11 55 161 16 06
It could be a lunar marker stone Spring, Summer, and Fall seasons, but it would not be easy to gage the moon's position given the evaluation behind it.
If you look at the two forward stones while sitting on the third rock, you will be observing astronomical activity from its back azimuth (165+180) of 345 degrees.
Brian Ghilliotti