ovis2
Well-known member
I was always told such circles where "teepee circles", but Eric's comments gave me pause. I did spend probably too much time this evening on Google Scholar (just as I often do for my "day job" as a college engineering professor), and I found several research papers discussing the archaeology of teepee rings across the western US and Canada. Some supported Eric's statement above, but many also supported (including written historical observations) the use of stones as boundary weights, and some further speculations about things such as burial circles and maybe spiritual circles. Anyway, one good compilation reference of historical observations, although admittedly a bit dated, is T.F. Kehoe (1960) STONE TIPI RINGS IN NORTH-CENTRAL MONTANA AND THE ADJACENT PORTION OF ALBERTA, CANADA: THEIR HISTORICAL, ETHNOLOGICAL, AND ARCHEOLOGICAL ASPECTS.The people’s who made these circles are not known. Modern Native Americans say they have no recollections or history of who made the stone circles(presumably to hold down a lodge). Natives used wooden pegs to hold down their lodges.
If anyone can enlighten further please do so.
I'll be up in that portion of Big Sky country this summer, so maybe I'll swing back by and take a little more careful look.