Query = 'which'

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Results from the Directory listing:

2002/Sep04  Mona Reservoir: On Assignment, the pulling of a single truck out of the mud flats of the drying reservoir, in which seven trucks and about 25 people participate.   

Results from the Photographs listing:

  #img_8959
Ranch west of Tomsich Butte, not the main house, which has fallen in, but an outbuilding

  
  #131-3176_img
The Jeep has arrived, and the truck, which first offered assistance, has gone to get more of it's truck pals to help.

  

Results from the Comments:

Donald 187 thought on 5/30/2006 that this photo was displayed properly and added the following:
"Personally I think it is Sclerocactus cloveriae which until recently was a part of parviflorus and whipplei. Its description can be found in journals written by Heil. Not completely opening flowers similar to whipplei but magenta. Spine very similar to parviflorus but more corky. I think its Sclerocactus cloveriae." 7729

Jake Richens of Salt Lake thought on 6/23/2005 that this photo was superb and added the following:
"have you hiked to the top of this pinnacle???? in steve allen's book, "Canyoneering the san rafael" he describes the approach, which there are two 4th class sections. if you would like some more pitures of this pinnacle, e-mail me @ [email protected]." 6390

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. " 4193

Dorde Woodruff of SLC thought on 5/30/2004 that this photo was good and added the following:
"This also appears to be S. parviflorus, but quite a young one. But the petals are narrow than in #8164. It is not S. whipplei, which has yellow flowers and grows in the Navajo reservation area in northern Arizona. The name S. whipplei got widely entrenched in the literature because S. parviflorus wasn't discovered and named until the '30s. " 7729

Bruce Wilson of Provo, Utah thought on 2/23/2004 that this photo was displayed properly and added the following:
"I shot this about 10 minutes before sunrise from the balcony at Bryce Point. The haze is from a large fire burning about 20 miles to the north, which settled into the valleys during the still night." 7318

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