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How prickly pear plants were used by American Indians for eating their fruits, buds, and stems, as well as for many other uses such as dressing wounds, paint, weapons, and more. Buds and stems video: • How I forage prickly pear buds & stems. paleoforaging.com/opuntia-engelmannii #foraging #ethnobotany #forager #foragetexas #wildedibles #wildedibleplants #wildfood #wildfruits #wildgreens #survivalfood #survival #survivalskills #primitiveskills #herbalmedicine #herbalism #naturalremedies #nature #cactus #pricklypear #opuntia References: Barrows, David Prescott. 1967. The ethno-botany of the Coahuilla Indians of Southern California. Malki Museum Press, Banning CA. Beals, Ralph L. 1943. The aboriginal culture of the Cáhita Indians. Ibero-Americana 19. University of California Press, Berkeley, CA. Bean, John Lowell and Katherine Siva Saubel. 1972. Temalpakh (from the earth): Cahuilla Indian knowledge and usage of plants. Malki Museum Press, Banning CA. Cabeza de Vaca, Álvar Núñez 2013. Narrative of the Narváez Expedition. Edited by Augenbraum, Harold. Lakeside Press, R.R. Donnelly & Sons Company, USA. Carlson, Gustav G. and Volney H. Jones. 1939. Some notes on uses of plants by the Comanche Indians. Papers of the Michigan Academy of Science, Arts, and Letters 25:517-542. Castetter, Edward F. and M. E. Opler. 1936. The ethnobiology of the Chiricahua and Mescalero Apache: the use of plants for foods, beverages, and narcotics. The University of New Mexico Bulletin: Ethnobiological Studies in the American Southwest. Biological Series 4(5). University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, NM. Castetter, Edward F. and Ruth M. Underhill. 1935. The ethnobiology of the Papago Indians. Ethnobiological studies in the American Southwest 2. The University of New Mexico Bulletin 275. Biological Series 4(3). University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, NM. Coville, Frederick Vernon. 1892. The Panamint Indians of California. The American Anthropologist V. Judd & Detweiler, Printers, Washington, DC. Felger, Richard Stephen, and Mary Beck Moser. 1985. People of the desert and sea: ethnobotany of the Seri Indians. The University of Arizona Press, Tucson, AZ. Gilmore, Melvin Randolph. 1977. Uses of plants by the Indians of the Missouri river region. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln NE. Hart, Jeffrey A. 1981. The ethnobotany of the northern Cheyenne Indians of Montana. Journal of Ethnopharmacology 4:1-55. Kavanagh, Thomas W. (ed.). 2008. Comanche Ethnography: field notes of E. Adamson Hoebel, Waldo R. Wedel, Gustav G. Carlson, and Robert H. Lowie. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, NE. Latorre, Dolores L. and Felipe A. Latorre. 1977. Plants used by the Mexican Kickapoo Indians. Economic Botany 31(3):340-357. Mails, Thomas, E. 1974. People called Apache. Prentice-Hall, Inc. Englewood Cliffs, NJ. Munson, Patrick J. 1981. Contributions to Osage and Lakota Ethnobotany. Plains Anthropologist 26(93):229:240. Ohlendorf, Sheila M., Bigelow, Josette M., and Mary M. Standifer (trans). 1980. Journey to Mexico during the years 1826 to 1834 by Jean Louis Berlandier. Vol. 2. The Texas State Historical Association, Austin, TX. Vestal, Paul A. And Richerd Evans Schultes. 1939. Economic botany of the Kiowa Indians: as it relates to the history of the tribe. Botanical Museum, Cambridge, MA. Winship, George Parker (ed). 1904. The Coronado Expedition, 1540-1542. A. S. Barnes & Co., New York, NY.