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White Sands National Park

Skunkbush Sumac-Topped Plant Pedestal All By Itself In The Vastness of White Sands National Park

A white gypsum sand plant pedestal topped by skunkbush sumac with a white sand landscape and blue mountains and clouds in the distance, White Sands National Park

According to the NPS, "The skunkbush sumac, also known as lemonade bush, forms pedestals by binding gypsum sand grains into a compact mass around its roots, branches, and trunk. In the spring before the leaves appear, clusters of yellow and white flowers make the plant stand out. The plant also produces red and orange berries used by American Indians to make a tart lemonade-like drink. The flexible stems of the plant were used for basketry and binding. The branches contain tannin, which is useful in producing dyes.

National Park Service

National Parks Traveler Podcast Episode 245 | Footprints in Time

An image of ancient footprints in sediment found near White Sands National Park

As you walk through the white gypsum sands of White Sands National Park in southern New Mexico, your footprints will likely be quickly erased by shifting winds. So it’s somewhat of a phenomenon of nature that the oldest footprints ever discovered in North America are not only found here — in perfect form, having withstood time and weather — but show that ancient humans lived here much earlier than previously believed. 

Sunday On National Parks Traveler's Podcast: Footprints In Time

As you walk through the white gyp-sum sands of White Sands National Park in southern New Mexico, your footprints will likely be quickly erased by shifting winds. So it’s somewhat of a phenomenon of nature that the oldest footprints ever discovered in North America are not only found here – in perfect form, having withstood time and weather, but show that ancient humans lived here much earlier than previously believed.

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