Those are fun from the Washington Post, Nuduke. There is a world class museum in Blanding, Utah. The trip to which I'll be gettig into soon in the series. Then, the plan is to post some of that information into the articles as the stories unfold and we come across examples of the archeological evidence. There is a lot of speculation and detailed evidence of people coming in and out of the region and how the region relates to the rest of the west, including my region. I took pictures of narrative and display that can be embedded into the posts, but I'll have to be careful to not veer off of the free range naturist theme, instead integrate.
We should head back to the Tortolitas where people like this used to live. It's is a hike with a surprise. I haven't been there since before DF's time and have no illustrative photos. It is a nude bushwhack across the bajada flood plain where there are still large excavations collecting rain water for farming. Tthere was a ball court, lots of habitation in the Tortolita area. They found the remains of 40,000 processed agave. I have a bowl of pottery chards just from my property in Tortolita. They used water and stored grains differently down here.
Yep, I've got books, the best magazine on this kind of study comes from Tucson. We're studying the heirloom plants here at mission garden and I have seeds to experiment with (like 60 day corn, and squashes), but I got sick and will now have to wait for next monsoon season to set that up and grow. I've got the University of Arizona study on the Tortolita bajada.
It all helps me to gather a better relationship with the earth, naturist, sustainable, spiritual, health, etc.
Jbee