I-69 enlargement creates brawl over ancient mill – Star

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SCOTLAND, Ind. (AP) — An Indiana skill owners says she might breeze adult in justice in a brawl over a centuries-old mill that was unearthed in Greene County during a state’s work to enhance Interstate 69.

Georgia Flinn says a mill ancient Native Americans expected used to moment nutshells was unearthed on her skill nearby Scotland, about 75 miles northeast of Evansville, in Nov 2006. Such stones are believed to date from a early primitive duration in a Midwest that lasted from 8000 to 1000 B.C.

The Indiana Department of Transportation told Flinn and her husband, Greg, final year that a supposed nutting mill had been found in 2006 though that a dialect had erroneously returned it to adjoining skill owners. INDOT wrote a neighbors seeking them to lapse a stone, though Georgia Flinn says she and her father still don’t have it.

“We wish it back,” she told The Herald-Times.

William Boyd, on whose skill INDOT says a mill was placed, would not plead a standing of a mill and referred questions to profession Rudy Savich, who did not lapse calls seeking comment.

INDOT orator Will Wingfield pronounced a dialect was reviewing a options to redeem a stone.

“It looks as if a usually approach this will be resolved is by some kind of authorised action,” he said.

Flinn, who will remove 11 acres from her 57-acre plantation — including a stocked pool and a open that reserve H2O — to a I-69 expansion, pronounced she’s prepared to go to justice if necessary.

“It amazes me they can acquire my land though we can't acquire my nutting stone,” she said.
“I only wish behind what is mine.”




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