Saturday, June 3, 2023

Megalits Ontario Kelso Conservation Area Niagara Escarpment

Kelso Conservation Area .Milton, Niagara Escarpment 

Megalitic Structures large stones of intelligent design.
90 degrees angles of stones
Canals in stones 
Megalitic structures.

isnthisna wall of some sort?
Beautiful trails.
bridges of stones?

Regular form for this stone too regular...
flooring with canals?
stones of similar dimensions, and a large wall.
Are these large stones that were part of a building one time?

stone with regular forms. Since when the nature create large rectangular stones? How long ago was the place built?

beautiful trails. 
large stones 
is this a wall?
large stones perfectly fitting together.
was this a part of a wall?
Was this an artificial Canal?

What are these parallel lines?
was this part of a wall?

To.access the area there is a fee.of $12 and the park is closed at night.

This park has an area of 3.97 square kilometres and contains Lake Kelso which was built for flood control of Sixteen Mile Creek and has a sandy beach for swimmers in the summer with a food concession and board walk along the lake to the Boat Rental shop which offers the rentals of canoes, kayaks, paddle boards, paddle boats and is also open to any non-motorized watercraft. The Park also offers 20 campsites, 18 reserve-able picnic sites, and two camping/picnic mixed sites. Glen Eden Ski & Snowboard Centre is located in the park and offers downhill skiing, snowboarding and tubing during the winter months. In addition, the Halton Region Museum is also located on the Kelso grounds. The park also features marked mountain biking and hiking trails.

Lake Kelso is a man-made reservoir which was created to control the flooding of Sixteen Mile Creek in Milton, Ontario. It is found within Kelso Conservation Area and is maintained by Conservation Halton.

One of the founders of Conservation Halton, Allan Day, recalls that before the reservoir was built, "Milton used to get flooded every spring thaw. Milton's main street would get flooded." It was Day who convinced the previous landowner to sell his property to the Sixteen-Mile Creek Authority in 1961. The authority purchased the land for $40 000 before erecting a $325 000 water control dam a few years later.


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