Marker
Split Rock, marking a narrows in Lake Champlain, was an ancient boundary between the Algonquin people and their Iroquois neighbors to the south. After the French and Indian wars it became a French-English boundary, and later it marked the line between Quebec and New York before the Revolutionary War. Here it is shown from the New York shore, looking east towards the Green Mountain of Vermont.
LR & PS with textures from Topaz.
Marker
Split Rock, marking a narrows in Lake Champlain, was an ancient boundary between the Algonquin people and their Iroquois neighbors to the south. After the French and Indian wars it became a French-English boundary, and later it marked the line between Quebec and New York before the Revolutionary War. Here it is shown from the New York shore, looking east towards the Green Mountain of Vermont.
LR & PS with textures from Topaz.