TY - JOUR AB - Recent food and seed sovereignty movements within Native American communities have ushered in a revitalization of cultural growing practices. Crucial to this work are efforts to revive knowledge and practices surrounding seed saving, which allow for future plantings of culturally significant crops. This research project, which exists in collaboration with Native Tribes throughout the Midwest, has undertaken efforts to conserve and share valued Indigenous varieties. In a Three Sisters garden plot located at the Horticultural Research Station rare varieties of corn, bean, squash, and sunflower have been grown out for amplification and rematriation. AU - Emma Herrighty, Derrick Kapayou, Valeria Cano Camacho, Ajay Nair, Christina Gish Hill, Marshall McDaniel, Donna Winham DA - 2022/6// IS - 1 VL - 2021 PB - Iowa State University Digital Press PY - 2022 TI - Reuniting the Three Sisters: Native American Intercropping, Seed Saving, and Plant Health T2 - Iowa State University Research and Demonstration Farms Progress Reports UR - https://www.iastatedigitalpress.com/farmreports/article/id/15481/ ER -