[{"source_document_id":1,"title":"New Hardy Fruits for the Northwest","url":"https://openprairie.sdstate.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1338&context=agexperimentsta_bulletins","rights_status":"unknown","evidence_claim_count":15,"relationship_count":0,"history_event_count":0,"sample_snippets":["Wakpala: In 1939 the fruit was 2.5 inches across; color yellow lightly striped with red; flesh white subacid with spicy sweet fragrance.","Wakpala: Mercer wild crab x Tolman Sweet apple.","Wakpala: sauce; the slices retain their shape in co@king","Wakpala: 2.5 inches"]},{"source_document_id":3,"title":"Edible Apples in Prairie Canada","url":"https://research-groups.usask.ca/fruit/documents/apples/Edible-Apples-in-Prairie-Canada1.pdf","rights_status":"unknown","evidence_claim_count":10,"relationship_count":0,"history_event_count":0,"sample_snippets":["Listed as a crabapple (crabapple or applecrab, fruit less than 5 cm diameter).","The entry includes the synonym Wakapala.","Referenced to CGS (Morden) and F&N.","Spicy sweet fragrance."]},{"source_document_id":2,"title":"South Dakota Fruit Garden (visual sample pages 9-11)","url":"file:///usr/local/var/www/pomologica/data/raw/manual/benchmarks/sd_fruit_garden_1943_pages_10_12.pdf","rights_status":"public_domain","evidence_claim_count":6,"relationship_count":0,"history_event_count":0,"sample_snippets":["Wakpala (1)","Haralson (2)","ZONE III All Rest and Northern two-thirds of State","WINTER APPLES"]}]