pinyon
PIN-yun
The small, slow-growing, drought-adapted pine of the high desert, whose protein-rich nuts sustained Indigenous peoples of the Great Basin and Colorado Plateau for millennia. Half of the pinyon-juniper woodland that defines the landscape between 5,000 and 8,000 feet. A tree that takes a century to look like much and can live for a thousand years.
Etymology
Spanish piñón, from piña, pine cone. The cone that holds the nut that holds the fat.
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