The First View – Lipan Point, Grand Canyon, Arizon…
Over the Edge – Lipan Point, Grand Canyon, Arizona
The Exercise of the Point – Lipan Point, Grand Can…
A Long Way Down – Lipan Point, Grand Canyon, Arizo…
Far Horizon – Lipan Point, Grand Canyon, Arizona
The Watchtower, Take #1 – Desert View, Grand Canyo…
The Watchtower, Take #2 – Desert View, Grand Canyo…
Dwarf Forest – Desert View, Grand Canyon, Arizona
A Filigreed Screen – Desert View, Grand Canyon, Ar…
Monochrome with Colours – Desert View, Grand Canyo…
Piering into the Distance – Desert View, Grand Can…
The Colorado River – Viewed from Desert View, Gran…
"There's Red in Them Thar Hills" – Desert View, Gr…
Counterpoint – Viewed from the Watchtower, Desert…
A Petrified Cascade – Viewed from the Watchtower,…
The Physical and the Spiritual Basis of Hopi Life…
Petroglyphs on the Ceiling – Watchtower, Desert Vi…
A Whirl of Glyphs – Watchtower, Desert View, Grand…
"Duck on a Rock" – Grand Canyon Village, Grand Can…
Snow Shelf – Grand Canyon Village, Grand Canyon, A…
The Hopi House – Grand Canyon Village, Grand Canyo…
The Road to Nowhere – Verkamp's Visitor Center, Gr…
Verkamp's View – Grand Canyon Village, Grand Canyo…
Just After Sunset – Airport Mesa, Sedona, Arizona
Just Before Sunset – Airport Mesa, Sedona, Arizona
The Back of the Butte – Courthouse Butte Trail, Se…
Rock Chimneys – Courthouse Butte Trail, Sedona, Ar…
Pinnacles – Courthouse Butte Trail, Sedona, Arizon…
Prickles – Courthouse Butte Trail, Sedona, Arizona
Fire Wood – Courthouse Butte Trail, Sedona, Arizon…
The Layered Look – Courthouse Butte Trail, Sedona,…
A Study in Ochre – Courthouse Butte Trail, Sedona,…
On the Trail – Courthouse Butte Trail, Sedona, Ari…
Just Bluffing – Courthouse Butte Trail, Sedona, Ar…
The Mund Wilderness – Courthouse Butte Trail, Sedo…
Bell Rock Up Close – Courthouse Butte Trail, Sedon…
Bell Rock – Courthouse Butte Trail, Sedona, Arizon…
Courthouse Butte – Courthouse Butte Trail, Sedona,…
Dragonfly Statue – Sedona, Arizona
The Butterfly Girl – Sedona, Arizona
Upper Town – Sedona, Arizona
Red Rocks Come in Bunches – Sedona, Arizona
Red Rocks With a Dusting of Snow – Sedona, Arizona
Caving In – Montezuma Castle National Monument, Co…
Upreach – Montezuma Castle National Monument, Coco…
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"Hairalinas" – Sedona, Arizona


A peccary is a medium-sized animal, with a strong resemblance to a pig. Like a pig, it has a snout ending in a cartilaginous disc, and eyes that are small relative to its head. Also like a pig, it uses only the middle two digits for walking, although, unlike pigs, the other toes may be altogether absent. Its stomach is not ruminating, although it has three chambers, and is more complex than those of pigs.
Peccaries are omnivores, and will eat insects, grubs, and occasionally small animals, although their preferred foods consist of roots, grasses, seeds, fruit, and cacti – particularly prickly pear. Pigs and peccaries can be differentiated by the shape of the canine tooth, or tusk. In European pigs, the tusk is long and curves around on itself, whereas in peccaries, the tusk is short and straight. The jaws and tusks of peccaries are adapted for crushing hard seeds and slicing into plant roots, and they also use their tusks for defending against predators. By rubbing the tusks together, they can make a chattering noise that warns potential predators not to get too close. In recent years in northwestern Bolivia near Madidi National Park, large groups of peccaries have been reported to have seriously injured or killed people.
Peccaries are social animals, and often form herds. Over 100 individuals have been recorded for a single herd of white-lipped peccaries, but collared and Chacoan peccaries usually form smaller groups. Such social behavior seems to have been the situation in extinct peccaries, as well. The recently discovered giant peccary (Pecari maximus) of Brazil appears to be less social, primarily living in pairs. Peccaries rely on their social structure to defend territory, protect against predators, regulate temperature, and interact socially.
Peccaries have scent glands below each eye and another on their backs, though these are believed to be rudimentary in P. maximus. They use the scent to mark herd territories, which range from 75 to 700 acres (2.8 km2). They also mark other herd members with these scent glands by rubbing one against another. The pungent odor allows peccaries to recognize other members of their herd, despite their myopic vision. The odor is strong enough to be picked up by humans, which earns the peccary the nickname of "skunk pig".
These specimens, created for the "Javelinas on Parade" project in Sedona by sculptor Liam Herbert, are located in front of the office of Pink Jeep Tours.
Peccaries are omnivores, and will eat insects, grubs, and occasionally small animals, although their preferred foods consist of roots, grasses, seeds, fruit, and cacti – particularly prickly pear. Pigs and peccaries can be differentiated by the shape of the canine tooth, or tusk. In European pigs, the tusk is long and curves around on itself, whereas in peccaries, the tusk is short and straight. The jaws and tusks of peccaries are adapted for crushing hard seeds and slicing into plant roots, and they also use their tusks for defending against predators. By rubbing the tusks together, they can make a chattering noise that warns potential predators not to get too close. In recent years in northwestern Bolivia near Madidi National Park, large groups of peccaries have been reported to have seriously injured or killed people.
Peccaries are social animals, and often form herds. Over 100 individuals have been recorded for a single herd of white-lipped peccaries, but collared and Chacoan peccaries usually form smaller groups. Such social behavior seems to have been the situation in extinct peccaries, as well. The recently discovered giant peccary (Pecari maximus) of Brazil appears to be less social, primarily living in pairs. Peccaries rely on their social structure to defend territory, protect against predators, regulate temperature, and interact socially.
Peccaries have scent glands below each eye and another on their backs, though these are believed to be rudimentary in P. maximus. They use the scent to mark herd territories, which range from 75 to 700 acres (2.8 km2). They also mark other herd members with these scent glands by rubbing one against another. The pungent odor allows peccaries to recognize other members of their herd, despite their myopic vision. The odor is strong enough to be picked up by humans, which earns the peccary the nickname of "skunk pig".
These specimens, created for the "Javelinas on Parade" project in Sedona by sculptor Liam Herbert, are located in front of the office of Pink Jeep Tours.
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