A stone labyrinth on the small island of Viirlaid in the Estonian archipelago, documented by Finnish archaeologist A.M. Tallgren in 1925. Viirlaid's isolation — accessible only by boat — has preserved this labyrinth in relative obscurity. The Estonian labyrinths, numbering fewer than a dozen known sites, represent the southeasternmost extension of the Baltic stone labyrinth tradition. Tallgren's documentation was part of the early 20th-century systematic survey that first revealed the vast geographic extent of Nordic labyrinth culture. At Giza bearing 352.27°, 3,343 km from the Great Pyramid.
Labyrinth Details
Pattern
Classical 7-Circuit
Circuits
7 paths, 8 walls
Material
stone
Age
16th-17th century
Country
Estonia
Region
Viirlaid Island
Related Sites — Ley Line — Earth Grid