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  2. Calverton National Cemetery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calverton_National_Cemetery

    Some of the fields in the cemetery have flat grave markers. Sign at the entrance of the cemetery. Calverton National Cemetery is a United States National Cemetery in the Town of Riverhead in Suffolk County on eastern Long Island in New York. The cemetery's street address is in Calverton but the property is in the adjacent hamlet of Wading River ...

  3. Burial in Anglo-Saxon England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burial_in_Anglo-Saxon_England

    Such markers included slabs that laid flat over the grave, and large crosses that stood upright, a number of which still survive in place. [94] Surviving marker stones have shown that a number of regional styles existed. [94] In Eastern England, a Scandinavian artistic influence is apparent on many of them. [94]

  4. Flat grave - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flat_grave

    An Iron Age flat grave. A flat grave is a burial in a simple oval or rectangular pit. The pit is filled with earth, but the grave is not marked above the surface by any means such as a tumulus or upstanding earthwork. [1] Both intact human bodies (skeletal grave) and cremated remains (urn grave) were buried in the graves.

  5. Gravestone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravestone

    The stele (plural: stelae), as it is called in an archaeological context, is one of the oldest forms of funerary art.Originally, a tombstone was the stone lid of a stone coffin, or the coffin itself, and a gravestone was the stone slab (or ledger stone) that was laid flat over a grave.

  6. Ledger stone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ledger_stone

    Grave of Sir Richard Kaye in Lincoln Cathedral Ledger stone from St Stevenskerk, Nijmegen (1668/1701). Heren van Overasselt Heren van Overasselt Rocks from the Tournai area date from the Carboniferous Period and have been used to define the Tournaisian Age , a subdivision of the Carboniferous lasting from 359 to 345 million years ago.

  7. Funerary art in Puritan New England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Funerary_art_in_Puritan...

    Matthew carved the oldest known grave marker in the New World, a table monument made of Windsor brownstone for the Rev. Ephriam Huit dated 1644 which stands in the Palisado Cemetery in Windsor today. Both Matthew and George Griswold would continue carving both walled tomb-style markers and normal headstones until the end of the 17th century.