As a resident of New Hampshire, I can tell you that the Old Man of the Mountain is a very tender topic for Granite Staters. If you’ve never heard of it, the Old Man is — or rather was — a natural rock formation that was the spitting image of an old man’s face. It was carved out of granite on the slope of Mt. Cannon, and if you’ve never seen it you can check out what it looked like on the back of the N.H. state quarter. This rock formation was there for a long time — a very, very long time.
Why It Pays to Second-Guess Your Technology Assumptions
Posted by: Ed Moyle October 20, 2009 04:00 AMAs a resident of New Hampshire, I can tell you that the Old Man of the Mountain is a very tender topic for Granite Staters. If you’ve never heard of it, the Old Man is — or rather was — a natural rock formation that was the spitting image of an old man’s face. It was carved out of granite on the slope of Mt. Cannon, and if you’ve never seen it you can check out what it looked like on the back of the N.H. state quarter. This rock formation was there for a long time — a very, very long time.