54 BUEEAU OF AMEEICAN ETHNOLOGY [bull. 55 



Artemisia frlgida. ^ 

 This plant is used in the same way as sdboVuwaj/e (see p. 44), but 

 is less valued, since it grows in the lowlands near the villages, whereas 

 Artemisia fill folia is brought from the mountains. 



Wapop'e^ 'milk plant' {loa^ breast, udder; po^ water; j/^, stick, 



plant). The plant is called thus when young. 

 ''Ojaqwi^ i^oja, unexplained; qtoi,.&hev). The plant is called thus 



when matured and its fibers are usable. 

 Asclepias sp. Milkweed. 

 The roots were eaten raw. The immature pods also were eaten. 



Cf. '' Ojaqwitsipseij, page 67. 

 String and rope were made of the mature plant. 



^ ImutaTca (^ Imu^ unexplained; ta^ ? grass; ka^ ? leaf). 

 Asdejplas sp. 

 A remedy for sore breasts, at Santa Clara. 



Wop6b\ 'medicine flower' {loo^ magic, medicine; />c>i), flower). 

 Campanula petiolata. Bluebell. 



Pida'^j/e^ 'painted root plant' {j^U'^ base, root; ff/-, painting, 



painted; p'e^ stick, plant). 

 Castilleja llnarlsefolia. Painted Cup, Indian Paint-brush. 

 The red flower is prominent in decorative art at Hano; it is painted 

 on pottery, painted and carved in wood, and imitated in colored yarn 

 on a wooden framework. 



P'^y, ''awi'ir)^ 'brown rabbit-brush' {p'u, Clnysothamnus bige- 



lovii; 'a, brown). 

 Chrysopsis hirsutissima. Golden Aster. 



Ta'""rice,y^ Hano Tewa 'ta]j?py (fa-"', unexplained; nseij, apparently 



^^ey, nest). 

 Atrlplex caneseens. Salt Bush. (See pi. T, a.) 

 At Hano the ashes are stirred into the dough for Diowa (see p. 29) 

 in order to turn it from purplish-gray, the natural color of meal 

 ground from " blue" kernels, to greenish-blue. 



? . 



Clctda occidentalls. Water Hemlock. 



^Ojop''e(^ojo^ unexplained; ^/^?, stick, plant). 



Coleosanthus umhellatas. 



P'^ins^i ''aqwiUs^hj^ 'white tendriled weed' {p'e''nseWi, weed; 

 ^aqwi^ tendril; isse,, white). 



Cuscuta. Dodder. 



1 Flowers of this plant, tied to pahos, are used in the Sojal ceremonies of the Hopi. 



