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- Death Hollow, Utah
Description: Death Hollow, Escalante National Monument, southern Utah. Collection: Northern Arizona University Anthropology Laboratories. - North Coyote Buttes
Description: North Coyote Buttes, Arizona-Utah border. Collection: Northern Arizona University Anthropology Laboratories. - S.P. Crater, Arizona
Description: View from S.P. Crater, north of the San Francisco Peaks. Collection: Northern Arizona University Anthropology Laboratories. - Cottonwood Teepees
Description: South Coyote Buttes, Arizona-Utah Border. Collection: Northern Arizona University Anthropology Laboratories. - Coyote Bridge
Description: Coyote Gulch, Escalante National Monument, southern Utah. Collection: Northern Arizona University Anthropology Laboratories. - Wahweap Badlands
Description: Northwest of Lake Powell. Collection: Northern Arizona University Anthropology Laboratories. - Zion Narrows, the Confluence
Description: Zion Narrows, confluence with Orderville Canyon. Collection: Northern Arizona University Anthropology Laboratories. - Devil's Sinkhole
Description: Devil's Sinkhole, the best known example of a collapsed limestone sink within the Edwards Plateau region. Devil's Sinkhole is a National Natural Landmark, but is managed by the state of Texas. Collection: National Park Service: National Natural Landmarks Program. - Wolfberry (Lycium spp.)
Common names: Wolfberry, Boxthorn Scientific name: Lycium spp. Description: A medium-sized woody shrub with small, grouped thick narrow leaves, small white to light purple flowered, and bright orange-red berries. Uses: The berries may be dried and eaten as a snack or processed into sauces and/or jams. - Oracle, Arizona
Description: A basin dominated by prickly pear cactus and shrubby grown in the lower elevations surrounding the Santa Catalina mountains near Oracle, northeast of Tucson, Arizona. Collection: Northern Arizona University Anthropology Laboratories. - Night-blooming Cereus (Peniocereus greggii)
Common names: Dutchmans' Pipe; Arizona Queen-of-the-Night Scientific name: Peniocereus greggii Description: The night-blooming cereus is a perennial succulent with gray-brown stems and waxy white fragrant flowers that bloom at night in the summer months, with each individual flower lasting only the single night of its bloom. The plant also produces an oblong red-orange fruit and has a fleshy root. Uses: Previously used for a variety of medicinal purposes, predominantly for control of diabetes. The fruits and roots were also used as food, as were the flowers and young stalks. - Hopbush (Dodonea viscosa)
Common name: Hopbush Scientific name: Dodonea viscosa Uses: The fruit has been used as a substitute for hops in the brewing of beer. The Seri use it as an external remedy for aches. - Sunrise on the Escalante Rim
Description: Escalante National Monument, Utah. Collection: Northern Arizona University Anthropology Laboratories. - Zion Narrows
Description: Zion National Park, Utah. Collection: Northern Arizona University Anthropology Laboratories. - Edge of TIme
Description: Hackberry Canyon, Utah. Collection: Northern Arizona University Anthropology Laboratories.