
Twenty km south-east of the village of Sukkajärvi, in the west
Karelia hills of the Karelia region of Russia, is the mountain of
Vottovaara. This region was once covered by a huge ice sheet,
several kilometers thick.
About 10,000 years ago as the glacial ice retreated, it left
behind a scraped and boulder strewn landscape with strange rocky
features. One of the most striking feature at Vottovaara are its
balancing stones, consisting of a large boulder propped up by
smaller stones.
Another interesting rock looks like a flight of stairs, while
another one looks like a precisely cut pool. Persistent winds,
stunted pine trees growing on the shallow and sometimes swampy
soil, and lightning-induced fires have given this land a character
quite different from other parts of Karelia.

While definitely unique and unnatural to the untrained eye,
retreating glaciers are known to sculpt amazing shapes and grooves,
and leave rocks (known as gracial erratics) at unusual places and
circumtances.
Some people still believe these rocks were shaped and placed by
human hands. Theories of the occult are also abound. The indigenous
Sami people consider the mountain sacred. They call these boulders
“sieds” and worship them.










