Dinwoody Dissected is a compilation of papers presented at a workshop in Thermopolis, Wyoming during June 2016. Papers were presented by researchers currently working on Dinwoody rock art or related topics. The focus of discussion was to gain a better understanding of the importance of the Dinwoody tradition petroglyps, to move forward to a consensus of origin and dating, and to come together to protect developed and unrecorded rock art sites.
Rock art and the prehistory of Atlantic Europe: Signing the land. Routledge. Bradley, R. (2002). Access, style and imagery: The audience for prehistoric rock art in Atlantic Spain and Portugal, 4000 – 2000 BC.
... Dinwoody Dissected: Looking at the Interrelationship Between Central Wyoming Petroglyphs, edited by Danny Walker, pp. 185–211. Wyoming Archaeological Society. U.S. FISH AND WILDLIFE SERVICE AND NATIONAL PARK SERVICE 2007 279 Cannon ...
Teit, James A. 1928 The Salishan Tribes of the Western Plateau. Bureau of American Ethnology, Annual Report, no. 45. Washington DC. Thompson, David 1962 David Thompson's Narrative 1784– 1812. Edited by Richard Glover.
After eating every kind of ice cream the saloon has to offer, Dinwiddie Dunn and his bowlegged sons get the dreaded brain freeze! Wait until you find out what the cure is in Brain Freeze Ain't for Sissies!
Surface water is abundant in the Wind Rivers; you rarely need to pack water. But water supplies in the Wind River backcountry are known to contain bacteria and protozoans, including Giardia lamblia, that cause illness.