

PSD Codes (political subdivision codes) are six-digit numbers that uniquely identify each municipality-township, borough, city-in Pennsylvania. Tax Officers: The local tax filing deadline is April 18, 2022, matching the federal and state filing dates. Community Development Block Grant (CDBG).Weatherization Assistance Program (WAP).Opportunity Scholarship Tax Credit Program (OSTC).Educational Improvement Tax Credit Program (EITC).Quality Assurance & Operational Support.Certified Economic Development Organizations.The editors of Scientific American commented on this artifact covered with beautiful floral designs, “This is not a question of zoology, botany, or geology, but one relating to an antique metal vessel perhaps made by Tubal Cain, the first inhabitant of Dorchester. Creationists have categorized it as an antediluvian artifact. Sometimes the object has been described as a pot or a candlestick holder. 46 of the 1985 Reader’s Digest book Mysteries of the Unexplained. Clearly the Dorchester Vase qualifies as an out-of-place artifact! The story of this curious artifact has been repeated in a number of different forums, including p.

The Roxbury Conglomerate, in which the vase was found, is dated by evolutionists to the Ediacaran Period, between 570 and 593 million years ago. I t was inferred from the locations of the two pieces of this silver-colored object (see right) amongst the debris that this vase had been blasted from the solid puddingstone which makes up the Roxbury Conglomerate approximately fifteen feet under the surface at Meeting House Hill.

Later the story was repeated in the Scientific American (Anonymous, “A Relic of a By-Gone Age,” Scientific American, no. T he story of this remarkable find ran in the Boston Transcript, a local paper. The composition seems to be silver and perhaps zinc. The metal is only 1/8 of an inch in thickness. The bell-shaped vessel has been described as being about 4.5 inches high and 6.5 inches wide as the base curving to only 2.5 inches in diameter at the top. After the explosion, two broken pieces of an ancient metal vase-like object were recovered from the debris. In 1852, construction work in Dorchester, MA involved using explosives to break up rock on Meeting House Hill.
