Imperial Co. Domelands
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Trail To The Domelands & Wind Caves of Imperial County
© W.P. Armstrong 1 March 2011
Highway S-2 En Route To The Domelands Trail Head

View of the Laguna Mts from Hwy S-2 in Anza-Borrego Desert State Park

1. Mud Hills & Dark-Colored Limestone Oyster Reef Along Trail


2. Chenopodiaceae: Atriplex species (Saltbush)

Desert Holly (Atriplex hymenelytra)

An assortment of winged, one-seeded fruits (utricles) of saltbushes (Atriplex) from the Death Valley region: (A) A. canescens, (B) A. confertifolia, (C) A. hymenelytra, (D) A. polycarpa and (E) A. parryi. All of these species except (B) and (E) occur in the Anza-Borrego Desert region.

Atriplex elegans var. fasciculata (Wheelscale) in alkaline depression along trail to the Domelands.


3. Asteraceae: Malperia tenuis (Brown Turbans)


3. Solanaceae: Lycium fremontii (Fremont's Desert Thorn)


4. Fabaceae: Psorothamnus polydenius (Nevada Dalea)

Close-up view of the flower of Psorothamnus polydenius showing bright orange glands on the calyx.

Magnified view of a gland on the calyx of Psorothamnus polydenius showing cellular detail. 400x
[The diameter is roughly equivalent to the length of an average grain of ordinary table salt (NaCl).]

  More Salt Grain Size Relationship Images   


5. Cactaceae: Echinocactus polycephalus var. polycephalus (Mojave Mound Cactus)

  See More Images Of Mojave Mound Cactus   


6. Boraginaceae: Cryptantha maritima (White-Hair Cryptantha)


7. Order Tulostomatales: Stalked Desert Puffball

  Another Fungus Relative Along Domeland Trail: Blushing Scale Lichen   


8. Fossil Sand Dollars (Echinodermata) In Marine Sandstone


9. Fossiliferous Marine Limestones and Sandstones

A & B: Marine mollusks (pelecypods & gastropods); C: Limestone oyster reef; D: Sand dollars (echinoderms).

  See More Mages Of Fossils In The Western U.S.   


10. Wind Caves and View of Carrizo Badlands

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