Eriosyce subgibbosa – Desert Botanical Garden, Pap…
Playing the Line – Desert Botanical Garden, Papago…
Totem Pole Cactus – Desert Botanical Garden, Papag…
Spotted Emu Bush – Desert Botanical Garden, Papago…
"St. Earth Walking" – Desert Botanical Garden, Pap…
Spoken For – Desert Botanical Garden, Papago Park,…
Three's a Crowd – Desert Botanical Garden, Papago…
Mammillaria compressa – Desert Botanical Garden, P…
Creeping Devil, Take #1 – Desert Botanical Garden,…
Creeping Devil, Take #2 – Desert Botanical Garden,…
"Dinosaur Back" Cactus, Take #1 – Desert Botanical…
"Dinosaur Back" Cactus, Take #2 – Desert Botanical…
"Transvaal Candelabra Tree" – Desert Botanical Gar…
Mountain Aloe – Desert Botanical Garden, Papago Pa…
Powder Puffs – Desert Botanical Garden, Papago Par…
Across the Back Fence – Montréal, Québec, Canada
Jezzar Pasha White Mosque – Viewed from the Citade…
Restoring the Citadel Walls – Old City, Acco, Isra…
Salah e din Street – Old City, Acco, Israel
Lantern Alfresco – Salah e din Street, Old City, A…
Some Lifesaver! – Salah e din Street, Old City, Ac…
The Rag Trade – Salah e din Street, Old City, Acco…
Street Signs of the Times – Salah e din Street, Ol…
Day-Glo Pickle Prickles – Desert Botanical Garden,…
Like Lemon Drops – Desert Botanical Garden, Papago…
Fallen Saguaro, Take #2 – Desert Botanical Garden,…
Fallen Saguaro, Take #1 – Desert Botanical Garden,…
Saguaro Skeleton – Desert Botanical Garden, Papago…
Barking Up the Right Tree – Desert Botanical Garde…
Seeing Pink – Desert Botanical Garden, Papago Park…
An Enchanted Forest – Desert Botanical Garden, Pap…
A Prickly Minuet – Desert Botanical Garden, Papago…
Crested Saguaro Cactus – Desert Botanical Garden,…
Cactus Burst – Desert Botanical Garden, Papago Par…
Senita Cactus – Desert Botanical Garden, Papago Pa…
Standing Sentry, Take #2 – Desert Botanical Garden…
Quiver Tree, #2 – Desert Botanical Garden, Papago…
Quiver Tree, #1 – Desert Botanical Garden, Papago…
Limestone Buttes – Desert Botanical Garden, Papago…
Upside, Downside – Desert Botanical Garden, Papago…
Saguaro Cactus Nesting Holes – Desert Botanical Ga…
Mammillaria melanocentra subsp. rubrograndis – Des…
On Balance, a Star – Desert Botanical Garden, Papa…
Let's Get Potted! – Desert Botanical Garden, Papag…
Toothpick Cactus with Two Rosettes – Desert Botani…
Location
Lat, Lng:
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address: unknown
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address: unknown
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
405 visits
Thunderbird – Desert Botanical Garden, Papago Park, Phoenix, Arizona


The thunderbird is a legendary creature in certain North American indigenous peoples’ history and culture. It is considered a supernatural being of power and strength. It is especially important, and frequently depicted, in the art, songs and oral histories of many Pacific Northwest Coast cultures, but is also found in various forms among some peoples of the American Southwest, East Coast of the United States, Great Lakes, and Great Plains.
A monstrous, winged predator – labeled "Thunderbird" in the deserts of the Southwest and in other parts of the Americas – played stirring roles in the myths of peoples worldwide. It produced thunder from its wings and issued lightning from its beak. It raised and shaped landforms. It created mankind. It symbolized Native American "heaven." It enforced ritual. It fed on men, women and children as well as large animals and even killer whales, littering the floor of its lair with the bones of its prey.
In the Sonoran Desert, a Thunderbird, which lived in a mountainous cave, preyed on the Pima Indians, according to a story in the True Authority Internet site. It died at the hands of Pima braves, who found the cave and blocked and fired the exit. The Thunderbird, roaring in a maddened anger, perished in the flames and smoke. Another Thunderbird died in a similar trap set by Pima Indians at a Puebloan village in southern Arizona. Still another fell to the arrows of a young Yaqui Indian boy, who had lost his entire family to the great predator.
Thunderbird figure, rock art in far western Texas.In northeastern New Mexico, said Mark A. Hall in his book Thunderbirds: America’s Living Legends of Giant Birds, a Thunderbird stood guard over the Capulin volcanic crater. It died when attacked by an Indian warrior. In revenge, its spirit called the volcano to life, threatening to annihilate the warrior’s people. Appeased when the warrior’s brother sacrificed himself by leaping into the boiling lava, the Thunderbird returned the volcano to calm.
In far west Texas, on the western flanks of the Franklin Mountains, a Thunderbird survived attacks of Indians, who nevertheless managed to imprison it alive in its cave, according to Ken Hudnall and Connie Wang in their Spirits of the Border: the History and Mystery of El Paso del Norte. "Woe be unto him who frees the Thunderbird, for he will be responsible for death and destruction far beyond anything mankind has yet experienced." On the western side of Thunderbird Peak, its presence is still marked, by a large red rhyolite formation shaped like a Thunderbird, "guarding the desert landscape, wings outstretched, head turned to the side, an immense, mythical silhouette. . . "
The Thunderbird made its mark in Navajo mythology when it carried a warrior to a ledge at the top of the sacred Winged Rock (Ship Rock, located in northwestern New Mexico), said Hall. It appeared in Pueblo mythology as a great bird with "feathers like knives. . ."
The Thunderbird takes on many forms in the rock art of the Southwest, but it typically bears a resemblance to the bald eagle on the Great Seal of the United States of America.
A monstrous, winged predator – labeled "Thunderbird" in the deserts of the Southwest and in other parts of the Americas – played stirring roles in the myths of peoples worldwide. It produced thunder from its wings and issued lightning from its beak. It raised and shaped landforms. It created mankind. It symbolized Native American "heaven." It enforced ritual. It fed on men, women and children as well as large animals and even killer whales, littering the floor of its lair with the bones of its prey.
In the Sonoran Desert, a Thunderbird, which lived in a mountainous cave, preyed on the Pima Indians, according to a story in the True Authority Internet site. It died at the hands of Pima braves, who found the cave and blocked and fired the exit. The Thunderbird, roaring in a maddened anger, perished in the flames and smoke. Another Thunderbird died in a similar trap set by Pima Indians at a Puebloan village in southern Arizona. Still another fell to the arrows of a young Yaqui Indian boy, who had lost his entire family to the great predator.
Thunderbird figure, rock art in far western Texas.In northeastern New Mexico, said Mark A. Hall in his book Thunderbirds: America’s Living Legends of Giant Birds, a Thunderbird stood guard over the Capulin volcanic crater. It died when attacked by an Indian warrior. In revenge, its spirit called the volcano to life, threatening to annihilate the warrior’s people. Appeased when the warrior’s brother sacrificed himself by leaping into the boiling lava, the Thunderbird returned the volcano to calm.
In far west Texas, on the western flanks of the Franklin Mountains, a Thunderbird survived attacks of Indians, who nevertheless managed to imprison it alive in its cave, according to Ken Hudnall and Connie Wang in their Spirits of the Border: the History and Mystery of El Paso del Norte. "Woe be unto him who frees the Thunderbird, for he will be responsible for death and destruction far beyond anything mankind has yet experienced." On the western side of Thunderbird Peak, its presence is still marked, by a large red rhyolite formation shaped like a Thunderbird, "guarding the desert landscape, wings outstretched, head turned to the side, an immense, mythical silhouette. . . "
The Thunderbird made its mark in Navajo mythology when it carried a warrior to a ledge at the top of the sacred Winged Rock (Ship Rock, located in northwestern New Mexico), said Hall. It appeared in Pueblo mythology as a great bird with "feathers like knives. . ."
The Thunderbird takes on many forms in the rock art of the Southwest, but it typically bears a resemblance to the bald eagle on the Great Seal of the United States of America.
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sign-in to write a comment.