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Devil's Cornfield Information

Devil's Cornfield.

Clumps of Arrowweed appear as shocks of corn in a harvest field. The presence of the plant growing on the sandy mounds indicate a shallow water table (only 5 feet).

The Devil's Cornfield is located along Highway 190 between Stovepipe Wells and Beatty Junction (just east of the sand dunes). The plant that gives the area its unique appearance is an evergreen plant, arrow weed (Pluchea sericea). As the common name implies, the plant's woody stocks were used by Native Americans to make arrows.

Devil's Cornfield 36.622141,-117.057695














From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia



Home Talk Contribs Edit Statistics Gallery eMail User Subpages


This page is a user sandbox of Transity.
Please do not edit this page unless you have been asked to do so by this user, or unless you believe something on this page violates Wikipedia policies.


    Launchpad         Ghost Towns Sandbox         Mixology Sandbox        NPS Sandbox         Alternative Medicine Sandbox         Public Watchlists         Vandalism      

To do Information

Tools Information

Devil's Cornfield Information

Devil's Cornfield.

Clumps of Arrowweed appear as shocks of corn in a harvest field. The presence of the plant growing on the sandy mounds indicate a shallow water table (only 5 feet).

The Devil's Cornfield is located along Highway 190 between Stovepipe Wells and Beatty Junction (just east of the sand dunes). The plant that gives the area its unique appearance is an evergreen plant, arrow weed (Pluchea sericea). As the common name implies, the plant's woody stocks were used by Native Americans to make arrows.

Devil's Cornfield 36.622141,-117.057695















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