Indian Rock Circles.

UPDATE: I believe I have found a total of 55 rock circles, 6 mounds, and 5 possible adobe foundations! The archaeologist that works for the Quechan Indian Tribe contacted the BLM archaeologist from the area. She tells me that the sites depicted in the pics I showed her have not yet been recorded! A meet will take place and we will visit the places I have found. These three structures will also be included in the survey...
AF 2.webp

AF 4.webp

AF 5.webp

They better bring enough water. We have some walking to do! ╦╦C
 

The list is growing!
Mound 9.webp ╦╦C
 

UPDATE: I believe I have found a total of 55 rock circles, 6 mounds, and 5 possible adobe foundations! The archaeologist that works for the Quechan Indian Tribe contacted the BLM archaeologist from the area. She tells me that the sites depicted in the pics I showed her have not yet been recorded! A meet will take place and we will visit the places I have found. These three structures will also be included in the survey...
View attachment 1841103

View attachment 1841104

View attachment 1841105

They better bring enough water. We have some walking to do! ╦╦C

I Drove into the desert and then used my Rokon to visit adobe foundation 5. It is NOT North American Indian. It turns out to be a mining site from the late 1800s and early 1900s. It is a concrete slab. I also suspect #2 and #4 are concrete slabs. Oh well, on-the-ground confirmation is required. I will also add that the number of rock circles found now is around 85 and growing! ╦╦C
 

On-the-ground hiking along these ancient Indian trails is producing more fascinating discoveries! One of the trails I walked produced a rock circle, rock cairn, and agate flakes! The agate flakes indicate that at that spot, hundreds of years ago, an Indian fashioned a stone tool/arrowhead!

First, I came upon the rock circle
Rock circle.webp

I then walked a little further and found a rock cairn set up to show which fork in the trail the Indians were to use!
Marker.webp

And then a little further is the agate flake scatter.
Agate flakes 1.webp

There were many more agate flakes here but I could not get all of them into a single picture and still be able to see them.

Neat stuff! ╦╦C
 

Just a thought , could these rock circles be for a burial or religious site ?
 

Just a thought , could these rock circles be for a burial or religious site ?
Yes, some certainly were. Although the archies must speculate on their exact purpose, some of the rock features were used for some sort of religious practice. A rock mound I found was littered with hundreds of potsherds. The mound probably was used to pray for rain... a religious shrine, so to speak. That would make it a religious site. but again, since their is no written record, the exact purpose is unknown. ╦╦C
 

Just a thought , could these rock circles be for a burial or religious site ?
Here is a THEORY of mine. I think these rock circles were POSTS that were manned during the thunderstorm season. Many of these circles are set up near natural "rain puddles". I think the Indians were stationed in these circles to await the heavy, yet unpredictable rain squalls. When it did rain, they ran out and collected the rain in vessels to return to the community. Just a theory of mine. ╦╦C
 

The number is now over 200! Here are some of the latest.
More.webp more 2.webp ╦╦C
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top Bottom