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- Negative 65
Subject: Queen Mary, Balanced Rock area, Chiricahua National Monument. Date: November 16, 1935 Collection: WACC: Chiricahua. - Negative 66
Subject: Duck on a Rock, Chiricahua National Monument. Date: 1935 Collection: WACC: Chiricahua. - Negative 67
Subject: Thor's Hammer, Chiricahua National Monument. Date: 1935 Collection: WACC: Chiricahua. - Negative 68
Subject: Punch and Judy in the Balanced Rock area, Chiricahua National Monument. Date: 1935 Collection: WACC: Chiricahua. Note: This image is also included in NPS's Historic Photos Collection: Catalog No. HPC-000456. - Negative 69
Subject: Chiricahua National Monument. Date: 1935 Collection: WACC: Chiricahua. - Negative 7
Subject: View from Bonita Canyon Highway, Chiricahua National Monument. Date: 1935 Collection: WACC: Chiricahua. - Negative 70
Subject: Chiricahua National Monument. Date: 1935 Collection: WACC: Chiricahua. - Negative 77
Subject: Chiricahua National Monument. Date: 1935 Collection: WACC: Chiricahua. - Negative 78
Subject: Sugarloaf Mountain, Chiricahua National Monument. Date: 1935 Collection: WACC: Chiricahua. - Negative 8
Subject: View from Bonita Canyon Highway, Chiricahua National Monument. Date: October 7, 1935 Collection: WACC: Chiricahua. - Negative 9
Subject: View of China Boy from Bonita Canyon Highway, Chiricahua National Monument. Date: 1935 Collection: WACC: Chiricahua. - Neil Erickson and Faraway Ranch
Subject: Neil Erickson and Faraway Ranch, with Stafford Cabin in bottom right. Date: Unknown Collection: WACC: Chiricahua. - Neil's Den
Subject: Neil's den. Date: Unknown Collection: WACC: Chiricahua. - 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. - North Coyote Buttes
Description: North Coyote Buttes, Arizona-Utah border. Collection: Northern Arizona University Anthropology Laboratories.