Although the desert may seem like a desolate landscape devoid of life, it is actually home to hundreds of unique species. Some are only visible or appear alive for a short time, others grow for hundreds of years, and many are not found anywhere else on earth. In this talk, ethnobotanist Carrie Canon shares about the many traditional Tribal plants uses, what plant life makes North American Deserts so unique, and how the Mojave stands apart from the rest of America.
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Carrie Calisay Cannon is a member of the Kiowa Tribe of Oklahoma, and also of Oglala Lakota,
and German ancestry. She has a B.S. in Wildlife Biology and an M.S. in Resource Management.
If you wish to connect with Carrie you will need a fast horse, by weekday she fills her days as a
fulltime Ethnobotanist with the Hualapai Indian Tribe of the Grand Canyon of Arizona, by
weekend she is a lapidary and silversmith artist who enjoys chasing the beautiful as she creates
Native southwestern turquoise jewelry.
This program was made possible by the support of Arizona Humanities and Findlay Subaru of Prescott.