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Episode 101: Worn Away (ad-free)

Like a well-loved pair of shoes, or those jeans you bought in college and never gave up on, some things become worn out over time. But when that thing is a physical location, eroded away by thousands of years of human activity and deep, rich folklore, what sort of nightmares might we expect to pour in through the hole? There’s only one way to find out.

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Further Reading  

  1. Margaret K. Brady, Navajo Children’s Skinwalker Narratives (Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1984). 
  2. Donald Callaway, Joel Janetski and Omer C. Stewart, “Ute,” Handbook of North American Indians, Volume 11 (Washington: Smithsonian Institute, 1986), pp. 336-367.
  3. Jeremy Kenyon Lockyer Corbell, Hunt for the Skinwalker, Directed by Jeremy Kenyon Lockyer Corbell (The Orchard, 2018). 
  4. Warren L. D’Azevedo, “Introduction,” Handbook of North American Indians, Volume 11 (Washington: Smithsonian Institute, 1986), pp. 1-14.
  5. “Dominguez and Escalante Expedition, 1776,” Uintah Basin, date unknown, www.uintahbasintah.org/jdandemain.htm.
  6. Åke. Hultkrantz, “Mythology and Religious Concepts,” Handbook of North American Indians, Volume 11 (Washington: Smithsonian Institute, 1986), pp. 630-40.
  7. Colm A. Kelleher and George Knapp, Hunt for the Skinwalker: Science Confronts the Unexplained at a Remote Ranch in Utah (New York: Paraview Pocket Books, 2005). 
  8. Clyde Kluckhohn, Navaho Witchcraft (Boston: Beacon Press, 1944). 
  9. Ryan Skinner and D.L. Wallace, Skinwalker Ranch: No Trespassing, True Stories and Secret Files (Ryan T. Skinner, 2014).
  10. Leon Wall and William Morgan, Navajo-English Dictionary (Flagstaff: Native Childe Dinétah, 2014).
  11. “The Dominguez-Escalante Trail,” Washington County Historical Society, date unknown, wchsutah.org/roads/dominguez-escalante-trail.php.

Episode 101: Worn Away (ad-free)

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