Ethnobotany of the Tewa Indians . A. CANYON OF EL RITO DE LOS FRIJOLES, SHOWING STREAMSIDE FOREST AND NUMEROUSRABBIT-BRUSH SHRUBS (CHRYSOTHAMNUS BIGELOVII) IN THE FOREGROUND ON B. PLUMED ARROYO SHRUB (FALLUGIA PARADOXA) IN ARROYO IN CANYON OF EL RITO DE LOS FRIJOLES. PRMRE-MfRlfreo*^™^] ETHNOBOTANY OF THE TEWA INDIANS 57 At San Ildefonso the chewed leaves are put on a sore or swelling,and at Santa Clara the roots are used as a remedy for diarrhea. Pyrjywihi^ mountain slope(p^*??, mountain; 7?^«^/^^, steep slope).Why the plant should be called thus could not be


Ethnobotany of the Tewa Indians . A. CANYON OF EL RITO DE LOS FRIJOLES, SHOWING STREAMSIDE FOREST AND NUMEROUSRABBIT-BRUSH SHRUBS (CHRYSOTHAMNUS BIGELOVII) IN THE FOREGROUND ON B. PLUMED ARROYO SHRUB (FALLUGIA PARADOXA) IN ARROYO IN CANYON OF EL RITO DE LOS FRIJOLES. PRMRE-MfRlfreo*^™^] ETHNOBOTANY OF THE TEWA INDIANS 57 At San Ildefonso the chewed leaves are put on a sore or swelling,and at Santa Clara the roots are used as a remedy for diarrhea. Pyrjywihi^ mountain slope(p^*??, mountain; 7?^«^/^^, steep slope).Why the plant should be called thus could not be punctata. Blazing roots were eaten as food. Lajpjpula florihunda. Stickseed. P^^ns^Vb ^QwViy, brown weed (p^ens^tl, weed; ^, brown).I/upi/nus achbncus. Lupine. open seed-vessels, wound aoout with woolen yarn, are some-times used at Santa Clara and at Hano in making artificial flowers fordancers headdresses.^ P^ens^Wb tsiteHy, sticky weed {pe^ns^bl, weed; tside, sticky, usually said of glutinous substances).? Puks^ (Santa Clara).Nuttallia plant is rough, covered with minute hairs, and clings to cloth-ing tenaciously. A young boy,


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookpublisherwashingtongovtprin