Query = 'plant'

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Results from the Directory listing:

  No matches.

Results from the Photographs listing:

  #img_8925
Yellow Beeplant
Cleome lutea
  
  #img_8924
Yellow Beeplant
Cleome lutea
  
  #img_8638
Yellow Beeplant

  
  #img_8306
Yellow beeplant
Cleome lutea
East of the Reef  
  #415-4
Mud flats, dead trig-like plant bright mud = +1 ev

Mona Reservoir   
  #165m-19


  
  #a012-08
This was a gravity-fed plant. I presume there is a mine above the plant.

  
  #263-30
Smokestack, Soybean Processing plant, Volga SD

  
  #a012-09
The bottom of the plant, where slurry? was loaded into wagons/cars for transport.

  
  #1751
On I80 in Wyoming, a tree growing in a rock, supposedly planted by somebody famous.

  
  #084-19
Powerplant coal silos

SDSU Brookings SD
  #064-37
Physical Plant,

SDSU Campus  
  #056-29


3M plant Brookings SD
  #a011-33
Shots form an old ore processing plant, SW of Goshen Utah.

  
  #163v-06


  
  #272-2
Ore processing plant near Goshen

  
  #277-1
Ore processing plant, near Goshen

  
  #277-4
Old ore processing plant, below Silver City, Utah, South of Eureka.

  
  #b037-02
Soy Processing Plant

 Volga SD
  #v116-10
Iron ore processing plant, with gravity-fed tanks

East of  Goshen Utah

Results from the Comments:

An anonymous visitor thought on 6/15/2005 that this photo was displayed properly and added the following:
"Hi Bruce, the correct spelling of the plant is Lomatium junceum. As you may already know, it is the larval hostplant of the Papilio indra minori butterfly you shot. FYI. ~Todd" 3432

Dorde Woodruff of SLC thought on 5/30/2004 that this photo was good and added the following:
"A pretty, neat flower on Sclerocactus parviflorus, not S. whipplei, which is a smaller plant, doesn't grow here, and rarely becomes cylindrical. The common name for S. parviflorus is a translation of the Latin, "small-flowered fishhook cactus", or more properly, "small-flowered little barrel cactus", a misnomer, since this species has small flowers only in comparison to the giant of the genus, S. polyancistrus of California. " 4187

Dorde Woodruff of SLC thought on 5/30/2004 that this photo was good and added the following:
"This plant is commonly misidentified, even in floras. It isn't S. whipplei but rather S. parviflorus, first named in the 30s by Clover and Jotter on a river trip, in the Grand Canyon. S. whipplei grows on the Navajo reservation and thereabouts in Northern Arizona, is globular unless very old, smaller, and has yellow flowers. " 4423

Dorde Woodruff of SLC thought on 5/30/2004 that this photo was displayed properly and added the following:
"this is not Opuntia polyacantha but rather O. basilaris, beavertail. Note that it doesn't have regular spines, just glochids, the fine barbed minature spines. The pads are bluer than O. polyacantha, and a different shape. The plant is more compact. Gorgeous photos! " 5060

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