During the centuries when they used the low stone walls, the Big Men also fabricated stone beacons about five feet in diameter and ten feet high. The stone beacons on Ungava Peninsula stand near to the low stone walls and the open-water marvels.
Lee, in his 1968 report wrote that there was "A string of astonishing beacons over much of this distance" [from Ungava Bay to Payne Lake, where the European style village was located.]
These stone beacons are made of carefully fitted stone and average five feet in diameter and over nine feet tall. (Lee, 1968)