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Image of Trevor Peck the speaker
Lethbridge

Speaker Searies: The Awful Truth About Medicine Wheels

     
6:30 casual chat, meeting starts at 7pm
Online: https://uleth.zoom.us/j/91225267308

Speaker: Trevor R. Peck

Virtual Meeting: https://uleth.zoom.us/j/91225267308

The term ‘medicine wheel’ appears to have its origins in 1895 with reference to a stone
feature on top of Medicine Mountain in Wyoming... the Big Horn medicine wheel. Since
then, the term has been applied in the literature to many large surface stone features
across the western plains. These assessments largely lump large circular stone features,
larger than those expected for tipi rings, into this ceremonial category with little regard to
location, contents, or ancillary features. A recent assessment of Type 4 medicine wheels,
now known to be ‘lodges of the dead’ produced by the Sikisikaitisitapi (Blackfoot),
illustrates an awful truth about ‘medicine wheels;’ there is no such thing. The term is a
rubric used by archaeologists to lump together stone features that exhibit superficial
similarities.