State History Guide |
State Symbols: Official State Flower Designations of the 50 States |
State Flowers |
Nevada Menu |
Nevada State Flower: Sagebrush
State FlowerFlower by: Santalady Sagebrush(Artemisia tridentata or trifida)Adopted on March 20, 1917.Nevada's state flower is sagebrush (Artemisia tridentata). It has small yellow and white flowers in the spring grows abundantly in the deserts of the Western United States. A member of the wormwood family, sagebrush is a branching bush (1 to 12 feet high) and grows in regions where other kinds of vegetation cannot subsist. Known for its pleasant aroma, its gray-green twigs, and pale yellow flowers, sagebrush is an important winter food for sheep and cattle Native Americans used sagebrush leaves as medicine and sagebrush bark for weaving mats. Adopted March 20, 1917 Sagebrush (Artemisia tridentata) grows abundantly in the deserts of the Western United States. A member of the wormwood family, sagebrush is a branching bush (1 to 12 feet high) and grows in regions where other kinds of vegetation cannot subsist. Known for its pleasant aroma, its gray-green twigs, and pale yellow flowers, sagebrush is an important winter food for sheep and cattle. Leaf: Simple, alternate (but typically clustered at each node), persistent (but some leaves are drought deciduous). Small (1/2 to 2 inches long) and narrowly wedge-shaped with a 3-lobed apex; silvery-green and pubescent on both surfaces; strong scented; sessile. (Added to NRS by 1959, 107; A 1967, 702)
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
Profiles resources and data , sorted by topics and by US states |
|
|
|||
|
Privacy | Terms of Service | © Copyright 2010, SHG, LLC, All rights reserved Please report problems with this web site to the webmaster@shgresources.com |