Trips Places Foods Stories Newsletters
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...

No search results found for
“”

Make sure words are spelled correctly.

Try searching for a travel destination.

Places near me Random place

Popular Destinations

  • Paris
  • London
  • New York
  • Berlin
  • Rome
  • Los Angeles
Trips Places Foods Stories Newsletters
Sign In Join
Places near me Random place
All the United States Wyoming Lovell Bighorn Medicine Wheel

Bighorn Medicine Wheel

Native Americans built this circle of stones, which was used to predict astronomical events.

Lovell, Wyoming

Added By
Trevor David
Email
Been Here
Want to go
Added to list
CAPTION
Medicine Wheel, a Native American sacred site in Wyoming.   U.S. Forest Service/Public Domain
Medicine Wheel National Historic Landmark.   Djonson5/CC BY-SA 3.0
Been Here
Want to go
Added to list

About

A mysterious pattern of stones sits at the summit of Medicine Mountain, nearly 10,000 feet above the Bighorn Range in Wyoming. Covered by heavy snows for most of the year, the stone configuration reveals itself and its purpose only in the summer months.

The stones are arranged in the shape of a wheel, 80 feet across and with 28 spokes emanating from a central cairn. The cairn, a ring-shaped pile of rocks, is large enough to sit in and is surrounded by six others that lie along the wheel’s circumference. Oddly enough, this configuration is not unique to Wyoming. Rather, hundreds of similar stone wheels exist throughout North America.

Known as medicine wheels, or sacred hoops, these special structures have been built by Native Americans for centuries. With uses ranging from the ritual to the astronomical, the medicine wheel has been appropriated over time by New Age spiritualists, Wiccans, and Pagans.

Of the various medicine wheels throughout the continent, Bighorn is one of the most well studied and preserved. As a result of the work of one archaeoastronomer, Jack Eddy, it was discovered that the arrangement of the cairns and spokes hold special celestial significance. Eddy suggests that when the wheel was built by Plains tribes between 300 and 800 years ago, it served to predict the positions of the Sun and other bright stars in the sky around the summer solstice.

When sitting in one cairn and looking towards another, the observer’s vision is drawn to a specific point on the horizon. Eddy found that two points determined by different cairn alignments corresponded to the places in the sky where the sun rose and set on the summer solstice, the longest day of the year. Furthermore, other lines of sight created by the cairn combinations marked the heliacal risings of the bright stars Aldebaran, Rigel, and Sirius.

A heliacal rising is an important event because it pinpoints an exact calendar date. This event occurs when a star first reappears at dawn, after it has been washed out by the Sun’s light for an entire season. At Bighorn, for instance, Aldebaran’s heliacal rising occurs just a few days before the solstice. Rigel then rises at dawn 28 days (or one lunar month) after Aldebaran and Sirius rises another 28 days after Rigel.

It is known that the number 28 is sacred among some tribes, because of its association with the lunar cycle. There are 28 spokes in a medicine wheel, as well as in the roofs of some ceremonial buildings. Whether or not the builders of the wheel at Bighorn were aware of the 28-day intervals between the heliacal risings mentioned above is not certain. This possibility, however, remains very likely.

Today, the Bighorn Medicine Wheel is still an accurate predictor for the summer solstice and is used by various Indigenous groups. Additionally, the site is a registered National Historic Landmark and is monitored by an archaeologist throughout the summer. Other important medicine wheels include one at Moose Mountain in Saskatchewan and one in Majorville, Alberta that is believed to be 5000 years old, making it coeval with the pyramids in Egypt.

 

Related Tags

Instruments Of Science Retro Tech Rites And Rituals Long Now Locations Sacred Spaces Ruins

Know Before You Go

Take US 14A and turn off onto a marked gravel road (Forest Road 12) that is located about 32.6 miles east of Lovell, Wyoming. Highway 14A is closed from October through May. The road that leads up to the Medicine Wheel itself, from the interepretive site, does not permit motorized vehicles, except for handicap accessibility. You will have to walk the last 1.5 miles, so bring water. Forest Road 12 is often closed due to snow until mid-late June. A fence surrounds the Wheel and Native Americans have placed prayer cloths along with other sacred symbolic items on the fence. It is expected that visiting tourists respect these items and not disturb them.

Community Contributors

Added By

Trevor

Edited By

Meg

  • Meg

Published

June 27, 2012

Edit this listing

Make an Edit
Add Photos
Sources
  • http://solar-center.stanford.edu/AO/bighorn.html
  • http://tps.cr.nps.gov/nhl/detail.cfm?ResourceId=841&ResourceType=Site
  • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medicine_wheel
  • http://www.codywyomingnet.com/attractions/medicine_wheel.php
Bighorn Medicine Wheel
Off Forest Road 12
Lovell, Wyoming, 82431
United States
44.826189, -107.921591
Get Directions

Nearby Places

Red Gulch Dinosaur Tracksite

Graybull, Wyoming

miles away

Heart Mountain Relocation Center

Powell, Wyoming

miles away

Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument

Crow Agency, Montana

miles away

Explore the Destination Guide

Photo of Wyoming

Wyoming

United States

Places 63
Stories 19

Nearby Places

Red Gulch Dinosaur Tracksite

Graybull, Wyoming

miles away

Heart Mountain Relocation Center

Powell, Wyoming

miles away

Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument

Crow Agency, Montana

miles away

Explore the Destination Guide

Photo of Wyoming

Wyoming

United States

Places 63
Stories 19

Related Stories and Lists

12 Ancient Scientific Instruments You Can Still See Today

List

By Meg Neal

39 Places That Will Warp Your Perspective of Time

List

By Molly McBride Jacobson

10 Archaeological Mysteries of the United States

ancient

By Kimberly Wadsworth

Related Places

  • Rapa Nui, Chile

    "El Gigante" and the Moai of Rapa Nui

    The largest stone moai on Rapa Nui.

  • Gobekli Tepe

    Örencik, Turkey

    Gobekli Tepe

    This hunter-gatherer architecture is believed to be the oldest religious complex known.

  • Mnajdra during Autumn Equinox.

    Qrendi, Malta

    Mnajdra

    This Stone Age solar temple aligns with the sun on each equinox and solstice.

  • An aerial view of Serpent Mound in the fall.

    Peebles, Ohio

    The Great Serpent Mound

    The largest earthwork effigy in the world.

  • The mighty Bagger 258

    Schipkau, Germany

    Bagger 258: The "Blue Wonder"

    The industrial monstrosity known as Bagger 258 is a colossal mining machine built in the DDR - but now left for dead in a German field.

  • A model of the Marconi’s original Table Head station at Glace Bay.

    Glace Bay, Nova Scotia

    Marconi National Historic Site

    Site of the first official transatlantic wireless communications.

  • The observatory stands in ruin today.

    Chichen Itza, Mexico

    El Caracol

    No telescopes, no power, no gift shop: The Observatory of Chichen Itza, one of the world's oldest observatories, takes astronomy back to basics.

  • Wardenclyffe Laboratory

    Shoreham, New York

    Tesla's Wardenclyffe Laboratory

    An unrealized dream to wirelessly electrify the entire Earth.

Aerial image of Vietnam, displaying the picturesque rice terraces, characterized by their layered, verdant fields.
Atlas Obscura Membership

Become an Atlas Obscura Member


Join our community of curious explorers.

Become a Member

Get Our Email Newsletter

Follow Us

Facebook YouTube TikTok Instagram Pinterest RSS Feed

Get the app

Download the App
Download on the Apple App Store Get it on Google Play
  • All Places
  • Latest Places
  • Most Popular
  • Places to Eat
  • Random
  • Nearby
  • Add a Place
  • Stories
  • Food & Drink
  • Itineraries
  • Lists
  • Video
  • Podcast
  • Newsletters
  • All Trips
  • Family Trip
  • Food & Drink
  • History & Culture
  • Wildlife & Nature
  • FAQ
  • Membership
  • Feedback & Ideas
  • Community Guidelines
  • Product Blog
  • Unique Gifts
  • Work With Us
  • About
  • FAQ
  • Advertise With Us
  • Advertising Guidelines
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Terms of Use
Atlas Obscura

© 2025 Atlas Obscura. All Rights Reserved.