Stone Mountain, located just east of Atlanta, Georgia, is a giant igneous intrusion formed three hundred million years ago when molten rock cooled deep within the earth’s crust. Stone Mountain is rooted in over nine thousand years of human interaction, beginning with the Archaic and Woodland peoples who utilized the summit as a sacred high ground. Long before it was known by its current name, the Muscogee Creek and Cherokee tribes referred to it as the “Dome Mountain,” recognizing it as a neutral meeting place and a site for profound ceremonial work.
7 June 2025 – Stone Mountain is definitely a vortex. We have always thought it has something to do with being the world’s largest granite structure which reaches for many miles in all directions underground. People get addicted to living near stone mountain emotionally and physically, including one neighbor who is a retired NASA astronaut. It’s like even the city drug dealers from Atlanta who try to come out here end up disoriented like when a bird flies into a window. Animals here seem to talk and they seem to listen. Possum will come right up to you, and raccoons, and other critters. The weather here is a microclimate that daily it rains and storms very loud thunder, when just a mile or two away it will be sunny. Big thunderstorms often come across the Atlanta area and just go around Stone Mountain like an island. Electricity bills here are a problem and sometimes spike hundreds of dollars for no reason; it’s not predictable. The Mac applet for seeing how clean energy is in your area just reads “Less Clean- No cleaner energy forecasted”. The EIA.gov website just says “incomplete data” for studying energy in 30083. We don’t exactly know where our electricity even comes from. Peace, hope this helps, J.B.
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Image By KyleAndMelissa22 (Own work) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
Note: There is currently no scientific method to prove that vortexes exist. Just because a location is on the vortex map, does not prove there is a vortex there. What it means, is that someone suggested the location and provided evidence or a personal account, and/or we found corroborating evidence from other sources. We do this so other visitors to the site can send us their opinion on the validity of the vortex claim, to build a consensus.
Have you visited this location? If so, let us know if you think this place is a vortex or not. We will post your comments here.