Steven Foster Photography

Echinacea pallida, echinacea, pale purple coneflower, pale echinacea Photos

For licensing and terms: contact:sfoster@stevenfoster.com; 479-253-2629

Echinacea pallida has a more eastern and broader range than Echinacea angustifolia, occurring in open woods, glades, and rocky prairies from northeast Texas, eastern Oklahoma, and Kansas; north to Iowa and Wisconsin; east to Indiana. The Oglala Dakota used the root of Echinacea pallida internally for toothache and bad colds. Wolf Chief, a Hidatsu, reported a warrior would chew a small piece of Echinacea pallida root as a stimulant when traveling at night.
Echinacea pallida has a more eastern and broader range than Echinacea angustifolia, occurring in open woods, glades, and rocky prairies from northeast Texas, eastern Oklahoma, and Kansas; north to Iowa and Wisconsin; east to Indiana. The Oglala Dakota used the root of Echinacea pallida internally for toothache and bad colds. Wolf Chief, a Hidatsu, reported a warrior would chew a small piece of Echinacea pallida root as a stimulant when traveling at night.
Echinacea pallida-93193
sfoster@stevenfoster.com