This June 5, 2013 photo shows fourth-generation pipe maker Travis Erickson holding a piece of catlinite _ a sheet of stone _ that he will carve into a traditional Native American pipe at Pipestone ...
Indian pipes are neat little woodland plants. Ghostly white, they are members of a group of plants that don't use photosynthesis to make their own food but instead "prey" upon fungi, stealing ...
Native American traditions are once again celebrated in Sonoma Valley, long after indigenous Coast Miwok and Pomo tribes made their homes in the Valley of the Moon. Thanks to the hospitality of Sioux ...
Karen McCann recently found about 20 Indian peace pipes with white single flowers where she lives in Gloucester. “The last time I saw one was when I was about eight to nine years old,” she writes in ...
Researchers at Washington State University (WSU) have, through an examination of pipes from 1400 year-old archaeological sites, discovered that Native Americans in what is now Washington State weren't ...
You are able to gift 5 more articles this month. Anyone can access the link you share with no account required. Learn more. Ghost pipes, Indian pipes, or Ice plants are three common names for ...
PIPESTONE NATIONAL MONUMENT, Minn. — Like his uncles and grandfather before him, Travis Erickson takes great pride in the handmade pipes he creates using red stone he digs from the ground and carves ...
Indian pipes are a neat little woodland plant. Ghostly white, they are members of a group of plants that don't use photosynthesis to make their own food but instead "prey" upon fungi, stealing ...
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