Purple coneflower
Add to Cart Add to Lightbox DownloadPurple coneflowers, also known as Black-sampson echinacea prefer the rocky dry soil of prairies as these flowers do in the Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve in the the Kansas Flint Hills. Purple coneflowers were used by American Indians as a pain-reducer in treating toothaches, burns, sore throats, mumps and wounds. The 10,894-acre Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve is located in Chase County near the towns of Strong City and Cottonwood Falls. Less than four percent of the original 140 million acres of tallgrass prairie remains in North America. Most of the remaining tallgrass prairie is in the Flint Hills in Kansas. Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve is the only unit of the National Park Service dedicated to the preservation of the tallgrass prairie ecosystem. The Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve is co-managed with The Nature Conservancy.
- Filename
- Purple coneflower.jpg
- Copyright
- © John L. Dengler
- Image Size
- 5494x8256 / 19.5MB
- https://www.photoshelter.com/support/license
- https://archive.denglerimages.com/p/licensing
-
America Bottomland Field Bottomland Pasture Chase County Department of the Interior Echinacea angustifolia Flint Hills Flint Hills National Scenic Byway Fox Creek Fox Creek Trail Highway 177 Hwy 177 K-177 Kansas Kansas Highway 177 Kansas State Highway 177 NPS National Park Service North America Spring Hill Farm and Stock Ranch TAPR Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve The Nature Conservancy U.S. US USA United States United States of America Z Bar Ranch black-sampson echinacea bottomland prairie coneflower flora flower grass grassland landscapes nature outdoors perennial plant plants prairie protected land purple coneflower scenery scenic tall grass tallgrass tallgrass prairie travel travel destination vertical
- Contained in galleries
- Flint Hills prairie - Kansas