How
are they made?
Medicine wheels were constructed by laying stones in a particular
pattern on the ground. Most medicine wheels follow the basic
pattern of having a center cairn of stones, and surrounding that
would be an outer ring of stones, then there would be "spokes",
or lines of rocks, coming out the cairn.
Almost all medicine wheels would have at least two of the three
elements mentioned above (the center cairn, the outer ring, and
the spokes), but beyond that there were many variations on this
basic design, and every wheel found has been unique and has had
its own style and eccentricities.
The most common deviation between different wheels are the spokes.
There is no set number of spokes for a medicine wheel to have.
The spokes within each wheel are rarely evenly spaced out, or even
all the same length. Some medicine wheels will have one particular
spoke that's significantly longer than the rest, suggesting something
important about the direction it points.
Another variation is whether the spokes start from the center
cairn and go out only to the outer ring, or whether they go past
the outer ring, or whether they start at the outer ring and go
out from there.
An odd variation sometimes found in medicine wheels is the presence
of a passageway, or a doorway, in the circles. The outer ring of
stones will be broken, and there will be a stone path leading up
to the center of the wheel.
Also many medicine wheels have various other circles around the
outside of the wheel, sometimes attached to spokes or the outer
ring, and sometimes just seemingly floating free of the main structure.
What do they mean?
Medizin-Räder sind gebaut worden und sind
für so lang benutzt worden, und jedes man hat genug einmalige
Merkmale, daß Archäologen es beinahe unmöglich,
das, für das jedes man war, genau zu erzählen gefunden
haben, und hat viel Erfolg beim Machen von breiten Verallgemeinerungen über
ihre Funktion und dem Meinen nicht gehabt.
Medicine wheels have been built and used for so long, and each
one has enough unique characteristics, that archeologists have
found it nearly impossible to tell exactly what each one was for,
and haven't had much success at making broad generalizations about
their function and meaning.
One of the older wheels has been dated to over 4,500 years old;
it had been built up by successive generations who would add new
features to the circle. Due to the long existence of such a basic
structure, archeologists suspect that the function and meaning
of the medicine wheel changed over time, and it is doubtful that
we will ever know what the original purpose was.
It is not hard to imagine that medicine wheels, like most large
stone structures, would probably have served a ceremonial or ritual
purpose. There is evidence of dancing within some of the wheels.
Other wheels were probably used as part of a ritual vision
quest.
Astronomer John Eddy put forth the theory that some of the wheels
had astronomical significance, where the longest spoke on a wheel
could be pointing to a certain star at a certain time of the year,
suggesting that the wheels were a way to mark certain days of the
year.
Other scientists have shown that some of the wheels mark the
longest day of the year. (Note that an astronomical/calendar theory
has been suggested for just about every unnatural stone structure
on Earth.)
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