Mariosousa willardiana

   

Mariosousa willardiana ( ) (palo blanco)

Acacia willardiana

Fabaceae

  • This thin, wispy tree is spineless and has paperlike, peeling, white bark. The trunk and limbs are usually straight, slender, and flexible, and the wood is hard. It is very common on rocky slopes, cliffs, bajadas, and arroyos near mountains. Palo blanco occurs in coastal mountains from the Sierra Seri to Guaymas and on Tiburon Island. It is endemic to western Sonora. Food Gathering: the wood was used to make the chisel pry bar ant the digging stick. Hunting: the detachable foreshaft of a sea turtle harpoon was often made from palo blanco wood. Shelter: the trunks commonly were used in the framework of brush houses and as posts in wattle and daub houses. Other Uses: uses of the wood included: the club for killing fish and sea turtles, a pole on which a deer skin was scraped, a carrying yoke. This was often made in the spot after killing a deer, in order to transport the meat back to camp. "People of the Desert and Sea, Ethnobotany of the Seri Indians".

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