The Zāģeri Devil’s Stone lies 3 km S-SW (in a straight line) from Kalnamuiža, in a wild and deciduous tree-covered side ravine of the right bank of the Amula River, about 300–400 m SE of the uninhabited Zāģeri homestead.
The Zāģeri Devil’s Stone lies 3 km S-SW (in a straight line) from Kalnamuiža, in a wild and deciduous tree-covered side ravine of the right bank of the Amula River, about 300–400 m SE of the uninhabited Zāģeri homestead.
Between the Vosvi and Šķepasti, 1.5 km S from the Druski Hill Fort, on the E coast of the Klotiņi Lake, 200 m NW from the Vosvi homestead.
200 m north-west of the Voļģi homestead, near the A. Saulietis’ native homestead “Saulieši”
On a meadow edge, 100 m seawards (to the W) from the Grobiņa–Ventspils highway, opposite to the Medze Peaked Hill, not far from the former shop building.
Six travelling or portable cup-marked stones, which were found on the Daugava valley wall at the Stukmani’ Vinakalns Hill, is the property of the Latvian Petroglyph Centre. The stones are now located with the Aizkraukle History and Arts Museum and are shown upon request. Some of the cup-marked stones were included in a travelling exposition in 2011 by exposing these in the territory of North Vidzeme Geopark – in Koni and Mazsalaca.
At the orthodox cemetery of Viļķene, 120 m NE of the cemetery, about 20 – 25 m of the left bank of the Urdziņa River, in a meadow in the middle of an alder forest.
In the Sventāja River valley, in the middle of the right bedrock coast slope, about 290 m from the Pērkoni 1st Cup-Marked Stone.
On the verge of the Ventkalni homestead’s road, in a meadow, on a slope, in an open area, 80 m of the highway to Talsi.
In the Kogulpete Swamp, between the Vecmangas and Kundziņi homesteads, about 700 m south of the abandoned Liepiņi homestead