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The Newark Holy Stones refer to a set of artifacts allegedly discovered by David Wyrick in 1860 within a cluster of ancient Indian burial mounds near Newark, Ohio, now generally believed to be a hoax. The set consists of the Keystone, a stone bowl, and the Decalogue with its sandstone box. They can be viewed at the Johnson-Humrickhouse Museum in Coshocton, Ohio. The site where the objects were found is known as The Newark Earthworks, one of the biggest collections from an ancient American Indian culture known as the Hopewell that existed from approximately 100 BC to AD 500.

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  • The Newark Holy Stones refer to a set of artifacts allegedly discovered by David Wyrick in 1860 within a cluster of ancient Indian burial mounds near Newark, Ohio, now generally believed to be a hoax. The set consists of the Keystone, a stone bowl, and the Decalogue with its sandstone box. They can be viewed at the Johnson-Humrickhouse Museum in Coshocton, Ohio. The site where the objects were found is known as The Newark Earthworks, one of the biggest collections from an ancient American Indian culture known as the Hopewell that existed from approximately 100 BC to AD 500. The Johnson-Humrickhouse Museum originally presented these artifacts neutrally, but has reorganised its exhibit changing the way it interprets them after the wrote in a report that "“Trust, Truth, and Fake News” as among the most important issues facing museums in the coming years" and David Fleming director of the National Museums Liverpool wrote that "“no museum is actually ‘neutral,’ ever." The museum's director and a former collection manager for the museum stated that it would be wrong “be neutral with regard to the Holy Stones because what we say and even what we do not say has social and political consequences” and that " The Holy Stones are a prism through which we can gain a clearer view of Ohio in 1860 CE, not 100 CE. Yet they also shed a bright light on ongoing efforts to rob American Indians of their rightful heritage and the modern legacy of the nineteenth-century science that sought to deny African Americans their most basic human rights." The display now allows visitors to see the exhibits from all four sides, includes an iPad kiosk with close-up photos, Google Earth geolocations, and "basic facts surrounding the discovery of the stones, and their connection to the other exhibitions in the same gallery, which covers socio-economic changes in the United States, specifically in Ohio, during the late nineteenth century." (en)
  • 뉴어크 성석(영어: Newark Holy Stones)은 1860년 오하이오주 뉴어크 근처 고대 인디언 고분 내에서 데이비드 와이릭에 의해 발견됐다고 주장하는 유물의 세트이다. 세트는 키스톤, 돌 그릇, 십계명과 그것의 상자로 구성되어 있다. 그들은 오하이오 코쇽턴 에서 볼 수 있다. 개체가 발견된 위치는 로, AD 500에서 약 100 BC 사이에 존재했던 호프웰로 알려진 고대 아메리카 인디언 문화에서 가장 큰 수집품 중 하나로 알려져 있다. (ko)
  • Święte kamienie z Newark – rzekome starożytne zabytki odnalezione w 1860 roku w Newark w amerykańskim stanie Ohio, mające być dowodem na dawne zasiedlenie kontynentu amerykańskiego przez Żydów. (pl)
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  • 뉴어크 성석(영어: Newark Holy Stones)은 1860년 오하이오주 뉴어크 근처 고대 인디언 고분 내에서 데이비드 와이릭에 의해 발견됐다고 주장하는 유물의 세트이다. 세트는 키스톤, 돌 그릇, 십계명과 그것의 상자로 구성되어 있다. 그들은 오하이오 코쇽턴 에서 볼 수 있다. 개체가 발견된 위치는 로, AD 500에서 약 100 BC 사이에 존재했던 호프웰로 알려진 고대 아메리카 인디언 문화에서 가장 큰 수집품 중 하나로 알려져 있다. (ko)
  • Święte kamienie z Newark – rzekome starożytne zabytki odnalezione w 1860 roku w Newark w amerykańskim stanie Ohio, mające być dowodem na dawne zasiedlenie kontynentu amerykańskiego przez Żydów. (pl)
  • The Newark Holy Stones refer to a set of artifacts allegedly discovered by David Wyrick in 1860 within a cluster of ancient Indian burial mounds near Newark, Ohio, now generally believed to be a hoax. The set consists of the Keystone, a stone bowl, and the Decalogue with its sandstone box. They can be viewed at the Johnson-Humrickhouse Museum in Coshocton, Ohio. The site where the objects were found is known as The Newark Earthworks, one of the biggest collections from an ancient American Indian culture known as the Hopewell that existed from approximately 100 BC to AD 500. (en)
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  • 뉴어크 성석 (ko)
  • Newark Holy Stones (en)
  • Święte kamienie z Newark (pl)
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