1945  When a tent is struck and the owner moves on, the ring of stones which held it down lies there for years to come, and these tent rings are found today scattered even more widely and plentifully than are the old igloos.
1955  Men and women who had been prominent in their communities, they [Blackfoot] laid out on hill-tops inside their tents, after weighing down the edges of the skin with stones. Many of the "tent rings" still visible on the prairies are, therefore, burial-rings, not the sites of ancient camps.
1958  My large tent needed more rocks to hold it down firmly that the usual tent ring supplied.
1967  In the valleys of the Dubawnt . . . and Back Rivers . . . only their stone tent rings remain, mute witnesses to the fact that people once lived there.