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         Ethnobotany:     more books (100)
  1. Native American Ethnobotany by Daniel E. Moerman, 1998-08-01
  2. Chumash Ethnobotany: Plant Knowledge Among the Chumash People of Southern California (Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History Monographs) (Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History Monographs) by Jan Timbrook, 2007-07-01
  3. Florida Ethnobotany by Daniel F. Austin, 2004-11-29
  4. Ethnobotany - Evolution of a Discipline by R.E. Schultes, S. von Reis, 2007-05-25
  5. Plants, People, and Culture: The Science of Ethnobotany (Scientific American Library Paperback) by Michael J. Balick, Paul Alan Cox, 1997-09
  6. Medicinal Plants in Folk Tradition: An Ethnobotany of Britain and Ireland by David E. Allen, Gabrielle Hatfield, 2004-04-01
  7. Ethnobotany of Western Washington the Knowledge and (Publications in Anthropology Series: No. X) by E. Gunther, 1973-10
  8. Ethnobotany: A Reader
  9. Ethnobotany: Principles and Applications by C. M. Cotton, 1996-07
  10. CRC Ethnobotany Desk Reference by Tim Johnson, 1998-12-11
  11. Ethnobotany: A Methods Manual (People and Plants Conservation) by Gary J. Martin, 2004-02
  12. Ethnobotany (The Green World) by Kim J. Young, 2006-09-30
  13. Footprints of the Forest Ka'apor Ethnobotany ... by William Balee, 1993
  14. The Great Cacti: Ethnobotany and Biogeography (Southwest Center Series) by David Yetman, 2007-12-01

1. Native American Ethnobotany Database
Search for plants used for foods, drugs, dyes, and fibers of native North American peoples. Results return list of uses, with references.
http://www.umd.umich.edu/cgi-bin/herb
The herb database has moved. The new location is http://herb.umd.umich.edu . You will be taken there automatically in 5 seconds. Please update your bookmarks.

2. Legendary Ethnobotanical Resources, Ethnobotany.com
Herbs and herbal products, oils and extracts, nutritional supplements, body care products, coffee and tea, and related books. Specializing in rare ethnobotanical seeds, herbs, and plants.
http://www.ethnobotany.com/
Online Store: Shop with ease and safety from our most popular selected items on our credit card secure server. Go to our Store's Search Engine for products Main Directory
  • What is Ethnobotany and the Purpose of LER? Terms of Business and Postage/Ordering Info. On-line Bookstore Rare Plants, Herb seed, Fruit plants, flower Seed etc. Herbs and Herbal products (rare herbs too!!!) ... Printable Orderform Other Related Ethnobotany, Phytochemistry urls FFA-Free for all Links, Advertising.

  • Herbal Extract,
  • Aura Cacia Pure Aromatherpy Oils in assorted sizes Deva Flower Remedies Frontier's Pure Essential Oils Frontiers Herbal Extracts in 1oz Bottles ... Natural Flavorings
  • Nutrients, Vitamins, Green Magma.
  • Food Science Vitamins and Nutrients Food Science Enzymes and other Nutrients Green Food Co. Barley Juice, Green Magma etc. Health From The Sun: Nutrients and Liquids
  • Ethnobotany.com / LER
    www.ethnobotany.com
    Herbs, Herbal Products, Oils, Extracts, Nutrients,
    Body Care Products, Coffee, Tea, Books,
    And specializing in Rare Ethnobotanical Seeds, Herbs and Plants.

    3. Ethnobotany - Access Excellence
    Defines the science, explains plant classification, offers articles on medicinal and food plants of
    http://www.accessexcellence.org/RC/Ethnobotany/

    4. Ethnobotany
    ethnobotany. What is ethnobotany? Baca Institute. Contact Us. Fort Lewis Home Page. Events. Links. Forums. Database. Welcome to the ethnobotany home page for Fort Lewis College and the Southwest.
    http://anthro.fortlewis.edu/ethnobotany
    Ethnobotany
    at Fort Lewis College What is Ethnobotany? Baca Institute Contact Us Fort Lewis Home Page ... Database Welcome to the ethnobotany home page for Fort Lewis College and the Southwest. Our site is devoted to collecting and disseminating ethnobotanical information on a local level. "Over there, I, from the flower-covered dawn, I am walking, here, I, out on the enchanted light blue earth, I am a person. Miki Maaso, Potam Pueblo ..."We were taught that we don't pick the whole thing. We leave some because God gave us this wonderful food, not just for the human beings but for all of us." Isabel Kent, Southern Ute "The status of the oak is poor today compared to when I was growing up. The impacts are the green lawns, construction, sewer lines and people." -Jay Johnson, Southern Sierra Miwok There are three classes in ethnobotany offered at Fort Lewis taught by Dr. Enrique Salmon.

    5. Amazon Conservation Team: ACT Home
    UPCOMING EVENTS. May 27, 2004. Annapolis, Maryland. The Hot Club of Cowtown performs at the Rams Head Tavern to benefit ACT. For more
    http://www.ethnobotany.org/
    AmazonTeam.Org Home
    UPCOMING
    EVENTS
    May 27, 2004
    Annapolis, Maryland The Hot Club of Cowtown performs at the Rams Head Tavern to benefit ACT. For more information visit the Ramshead Tavern
    until June 11, 2004
    ACT’s Fathers for Forests Program. Give your Dad something he’ll never forget! – a protected piece of the Colombian Amazon – and help Dads around the world unite to make a difference in the Amazon. Welcome to AmazonTeam.Org
    MAY UPDATE May 25, 2004
    As a follow-up to the Gathering of Women in Colombia, Carolina Amaya and other ACT-Colombia staff spent a week in the land surrounding the meeting house to complete the initial biological survey and inventory. ACT is currently working to acquire and protect an additional 37 acres of adjacent land, as a reserve and an area for the women to gather medicinal plants.
    RECENT NEWS
    THE AMAZON CONSERVATION TEAM
    info@amazonteam.org

    6. Ethnobotany
    Houses collections of domesticated plants from around the world as well as specimens recovered from archaeological sites. Laboratory reports available for download in Adobe .pdf format, sorted by report number or locale.
    http://www.umma.lsa.umich.edu/Ethnobotany/Ethnobotany.html
    The Ethnobotany laboratory houses extensive collections of domesticated plants from around the world as well as specimens recovered from archaeological sites. The laboratory produces analysis reports for submitted specimens. A list of these reports is available in Adobe Acrobat format. Lists are approximately 126K in size. Download a free
    You may also be interested in The Society for Economic Botany

    7. Ethnobotany
    AN INTRODUCTION TO ethnobotany. Connie Veilleux and Steven R.King, Ph.D. Linda Morganstein, editor. Shaman Pharmaceuticals, Inc. WHAT IS ethnobotany?
    http://www.accessexcellence.org/RC/Ethnobotany/page2.html
    AN INTRODUCTION TO ETHNOBOTANY
    Connie Veilleux and Steven R.King, Ph.D.
    Linda Morganstein, editor Shaman Pharmaceuticals, Inc. work interdisciplinary to discover new drugs.
    Photo by Steven R. King, 1996. Since the beginning of civilization, people have used plants as medicine. Perhaps as early as Neanderthal man, plants were believed to have healing powers. The earliest recorded uses are found in Babylon circa 1770 BC in the Code of Hammurabi and in ancient Egypt circa 1550 B.C. In fact, ancient Egyptians believed medicinal plants to have utility even in the afterlife of their pharaohs. Plants have been recovered from the Giza pyramids and can be found on display in a dark corner of t Access Excellence Resource Center he Cairo Museum. A discussion of human life on this planet would not be complete without a look at the role of plants. A complete record of the many thousands of plant species used for human functioning would fill volumes, yet historians have often tended "to dismiss plants as less than fundamental in history." In recent years, however, there has been a reawakened scientific interest in the fundamental role plants play in many cultures, including medicinal purposes.

    8. Ethnobotany And Paleoethnobotany Bibliography
    Compiled by Michael A. Pfeiffer.
    http://wings.buffalo.edu/anthropology/Documents/ethnobib.txt

    9. Ethnobotany Garden - "The Role Of Plants In Society"
    We are dedicated to promoting the hobby and the science of ethnobotany in all its diverse forms. G. ethnobotany has many different definitions.
    http://ethnobotany.yage.net/
    Home Discussion Forum Ethnobotany Links
    "The role of plants in society"
    Saturday March 15, 2003. Beware the Ides of March! The forums are back up! If you thought you were going to a Canadian commercial site, you might actually have been looking for Ethnogarden Botanicals . Tell them we sent you! -G- Ethnobotany has many different definitions. The most widely accepted and used is "the use of plants in primitive societies". Richard Evans Schultes, one of the modern fathers of ethnobotany expands upon this definition defining ethnobotany as "the study of human evaluation and manipulation of plant materials, substances, and phenomenon, including relevant concepts, in primitive or unlettered societies." Important concepts in ethnobotany today also include economic botany, sustainable harvesting (ethical wildcrafting ), ethics and intellectual property rights, and as a representational voice for the cultures where the field work is done. As a field of research and study, ethnobotany is an interdisciplinary approach using botany, anthropology, history, chemistry, and many others. The ethnobotany garden is a community of people looking for plant knowledge of all kinds. Please check back often as we will be continually working on this site. We have the Forums up, please feel free to post away.

    10. Phytochemical And Ethnobotanical Databases
    ethnobotany Searches. Ethnobotanical uses for a particular plant American Indian ethnobotany Database. Plants and Cancer Treatments U
    http://www.ars-grin.gov/duke
    Dr. Duke's
    Phytochemical and Ethnobotanical Databases
    WARNING
    Specific Queries of the Phytochemical Database
    Queries indicated in green new queries that search the most recent version of the database
    Plant Searches
    Chemicals and activities in a particular plant.
    High concentration chemicals
    Chemicals with one activity
    Ethnobotanical uses
    List chemicals and activities for a plant
    Chemical Searches
    Plants with a chosen chemical
    Activities of a chosen chemical
    List activities and plants for a chemical
    Activity Searches
    Plants with a specific activity
    Search for plants with several activities
    Chemicals with a specific activity
    Lethal dose (LD) information for a chemical
    Search for plants/chemicals with one or more activities
    Search for plants/chemicals with a superactivity
    Ethnobotany Searches
    Ethnobotanical uses for a particular plant.
    Plants with a particular ethnobotanical use.
    Database References
    Reference citations
    Browsable databases:
    EcoSys Plant ecological ranges AceBrowser WebAce EthnobotDB Worldwide plant uses AceBrowser WebAce FoodplantDB Native American food plants AceBrowser WebAce MPNADB Medicinal plants of Native America AceBrowser WebAce PhytochemDB Plant chemicals AceBrowser WebAce
    Documents
    Dictionaries
    Tico Ethnobotanical Dictionary
    Mini-Courses
    Syllabus for Medical Botany Course taught by Jim Duke.

    11. Ethnobotany Query
    Phytochemical and Ethnobotanical Databases. ethnobotany query. This query displays a list of the ethnobotanical uses for one or more plants. To enter a query, type the genus and species names in the
    http://www.ars-grin.gov/duke/ethnobot.html
    Phytochemical and Ethnobotanical Databases
    Ethnobotany query
    This query displays a list of the ethnobotanical uses for one or more plants. To enter a query, type the genus and species names in the boxes below. Capitalization is unimportant (example: echinacea or Echinacea will return the same items). Use an asterisk to wild card your search criteria (example: Taxus ba* for species of Taxus starting with 'ba')
    Scientific name:
    Genus
    required, species optional)
    WARNING
    Send comments or suggestions:
    Jim Duke
    Green Farmacy Garden
    8210 Murphy Road
    Fulton, MD 20759
    or
    Mary Jo Bogenschutz bogie@hawaii.rr.com
    Written - September 1994
    Last updated - 10 March 1998

    12. Ethnobotany
    ethnobotany. This guide contains bibliographic references and links to internet resources for ethnobotany and indigenous plant use. Recommended Reading The Andean Cocaine Industry by Patrick L. Clawson, et al 1998 foundations of Bedouin shamanism and ethnobotany as well as ethology of Bedouins
    http://home1.gte.net/ericjw1/ethnobotany.html
    Ethnobotany This guide contains bibliographic references and links to internet resources for ethnobotany and indigenous plant use. Recommended Reading: The Andean Cocaine Industry by Patrick L. Clawson, et al 1998 Economic, Environmental, and Health Tradeoffs in Agriculture: Pesticides and the Sustainability of Andean Potato Production by Charles C. Crissman (Editor), et al 1997 Earth Medicine-Earth Food: Plant Remedies, Drugs, and Natural Foods of the North American Indians by Michael A. Weiner 1991 Ethnobotany: Evolution of a Discipline by Richard Evans Schultes, et al (Editors) 1995 Flesh of the Gods: The Ritual Use of Hallucinogens by Peter T. Furst 1990 Native American Ethnobotany by Daniel E. Moerman 1998 Paleoethnobotany: A Handbook of Procedures by Deborah M. Pearsall 1989 People, Plants, and Landscapes: Studies in Paleoethnobotany by Kristen J. Gremillion (Editor) 1997 Persephone's Quest: Entheogens and the Origins of Religion by R. Gordon Wasson, et al. 1992 Plants, People, and Culture: The Science of Ethnobotany by Michael J. Balick et al. 1997 Sacred Plant Medicine: Explorations in the Practice of Indigenous Herbalism by Stephen Harrod Buhner 1996 Traditional Plant Foods of Canadian Indigenous Peoples: Nutrition, Botany and Use

    13. ETHNOBOTANY OF WILD PLANT FOODS
    ethnobotany OF WILD PLANT FOODS. However, ethnobotany is not just the study of other cultures use of plants, it includes our own cultural traditions.
    http://www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/research/profiles/smason/smethnob.htm
    ETHNOBOTANY OF WILD PLANT FOODS
    by: Sarah Mason Ethnobotany is the study of the use of plants by people, and can draw on many sources ranging from anthropological or ethnobotanical studies of current plant use by existing peoples, through documentary and historical sources (travellers' tales, writings of the Classical authors, Mediaeval Herbals, etc.), to present-day cookery or woodworking books, to give a few examples. Ethnobotany is a burgeoning field, as evidenced by the vast number of general handbooks on the subject which have appeared recently, though much interest is focused on such commercially-viable fields as ethnopharmacology (or medicinal plant use - for info on an interesting and informative mailing list related to this topic visit the Phytopharmacognosy list Home Page , or on 'fundable' topics such as studies of biodiversity. Along with an increasing awareness of the value of what is often rapidly-disappearing indigenous or traditional knowledge of the uses of plants, there is an increasing awareness of the need by those who wish to obtain ethnobotanical data from cultures other than their own to take account of 'indigenous property rights' (IPR), and to respect the 'ownership' of such cultural or traditional knowledge - the Society of Ethnobiology (see Ethnobotany Links, below), for instance, now has a Code of Ethics and Standards of Practice which covers this. A number of Internet links exist dealing with both the practical and ethical aspects 'of indigenous' (IK) or 'traditional environmental knowledge' (TEK), and can be useful online sources for ethnobotany (see also my

    14. Ethnobotany And Cultural Resources
    our customers better. Please bookmark our new location http//www.wsdot.wa.gov/environment/culres/ethbot/ethnobotany.htm. You can
    http://www.wsdot.wa.gov/environment/eao/culres/ethbot/Ethnobotany.htm
    This Page has moved ...
    The Environmental Affairs Office changed its name to Environmental Services
    and the home page has moved to serve our customers better.
    Please bookmark our new location:
    http://www.wsdot.wa.gov/environment/culres/ethbot/ethnobotany.htm You can select a link to the new site or after 30 seconds you will be automatically directed to our new location. Thank you for your patience!

    15. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew: Ethnobotany Reading List
    Visitor Information, ethnobotany Introductory Reading List. Readable, still vigorous polemic on the importance of ethnobotany. Balick, MJ PA Cox (1996).
    http://www.rbgkew.org.uk/scihort/eblinks/ethnobook.html
    Ethnobotany: Introductory Reading List Further suggestions are welcome, particularly for outstanding regional monographs. Introductory Anderson, E. S. (1967). Plants, man, and life . University of California Press, Berkeley, CA, 251p. Readable, still vigorous polemic on the importance of ethnobotany Plants, people, and culture : the science of ethnobotany . Scientific American Library series 60. Scientific American Library, New York, 228p. Well illustrated and wide-ranging survey of the subject Lewington, A. (1990). Plants for people . Natural History Museum Publications, London, 232p. Good introduction to uses of plants Minnis, P. E. (2000). Ethnobotany: a reader . University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, OK, 327p. Economic botany: plants in our world . McGraw-Hill Higher Education. Methodology Selected guidelines for ethnobotanical research : a field manual . New York Botanical Garden, Bronx, N.Y., 306p. Cotton, C. M. (1996). Ethnobotany : principles and applications Cunningham, A. B. (2001). Applied ethnobotany : people, wild plant use and conservation . Earthscan, London, 300p.

    16. Sacred Earth - Ethnobotany & Ecotravel: All The Earth Is Sacred
    These page are intended as a brief introduction to ethnobotany. These page are intended as a brief introduction to ethnobotany.
    http://www.sacredearth.com/ethnobotany.htm
    ALL THE EARTH IS SACRED
    In classical Greek mythology, the Earth-Goddess Gaia brought forth all life on planet Earth. All the different species of fungi, plants, animals, insects and fish were her children, yet also a part of her body. Gaia breathed life into them all, and all were equally important. An interrelated web of life, each species dependent on all others. From her, all live proceeded and to her all must return. She was the womb and the tomb of life. This co-evolutionary vision of life recognizes nature itself as the source and sustainer of all existence, the central hub of the wheel on which all the individual strands of life depend. Without her all encompassing nurturing, life would not be possible at all. This ancient story is echoed in mythologies around the world. It stems from a time long ago, when mankind still had awe and respect for the forces of nature. But then a new belief spread like a cancer across the surface of the earth, deeming mankind to be the pinnacle of creation and demanding that we should take dominion over the earth, and over all that there creepeth...

    17. Ethnobotany And Cultural Resources
    ethnobotany and Cultural Resources of the Washington State Department of Transportation. Scott T. ClayPoole, Ph.D. ethnobotany Citations/References.
    http://www.wsdot.wa.gov/environment/culres/ethbot/Ethnobotany.htm

    Environmental Liaison
    Environmental Permit Streamlining Act Environmental Procedures Manual Compliance Branch ... Hazardous Materials Can't find what you are looking for? Try the Environmental Services Web Site Map Looking for an Environmental staff phone number? Try the Environmental Services Directory
    Ethnobotany and Cultural Resources of the Washington State Department of Transportation
    Scott T. Clay-Poole, Ph.D. Ethnobotany is the study of the relationship between cultures and plants. The following information is a condensed extraction from a list of references on the uses of western Washington plants by a wide variety of cultures. The plants are listed by scientific name and common name. The plants are initially listed as those found at cultural sites along the right-of-way previous to highway safety improvements in the state of Washington. None of the plants listed are recommended for use. But if plant material is utilized in some way by the viewer that individual species must be accurately identified by an expert and then used with caution.* Some plants are included because of interest and/or beauty and like the rest, may be susceptible to rapid decimation in local areas. Plants such as Tiger lily, Chocolate lily, and Calypso having edible bulbs necessitates destroying the entire plant for minimal sustenance. Please think conservatively if you feel you need to "take" a plant.

    18. Countrylife.net Ethnobotany (Herbs)
    We re improving Countrylife.net to serve you better! We re sorry for the confusion, but the page you are looking for on countrylife.net has been moved here.
    http://countrylife.net/ethnobotany/
    We're improving Countrylife.net to serve you better! We're sorry for the confusion, but the page you are looking for on countrylife.net has been moved here We also invite you to visit our home page at www.countrylife.net and try searching the many new forums. Thanks for your support of Countrylife.net

    19. Ethnobotany - Alnus Rubra
    and uses of Alnus rubra.......
    http://www.wsdot.wa.gov/environment/culres/ethbot/a-c/Alnusrubra.htm

    Environmental Liaison
    Environmental Permit Streamlining Act Environmental Procedures Manual Compliance Branch ... Hazardous Materials Can't find what you are looking for? Try the Environmental Services Web Site Map Looking for an Environmental staff phone number? Try the Environmental Services Directory
    Alnus rubra
    Red Alder
    Betulaceae
    (Birch Family)
    Tree to 60-70 feet high, and diameter of old trees to 40 inches; bark thin, greenish on young trees, turning grey to whitish with age. The inner bark and fresh wounds tend to turn deep reddish-orange when exposed to moist air. Leaves to 6" or more in length, ovate to oval, acute, pubescent on veins beneath, petioles and veins rusty-red. Flowers opening before the leaves, on the branchlets of last year. Male flowers are borne in long, haning, clustered catkins which ripen in early spring. Female cone catkins 4-8, are 1" long, on short stalks, which are green at first, then turn brown and woody at maturity. This woody cone produces a narrow-winged, small, flat nutlet for a seed Moist woods, swampy areas and recently cleared ground. Red alder does not tolerate shade and occupies a site quickly after disturbance. It grows rapidly, often shading out conifers such as Douglas-fir, It tends to occur on sites rich in nutrients, including floodplains and streambanks. Red alder occurs with all of the low elevation coastal tree species, including black cottonwood, grand fir, Douglas-fir, and the cedars. It tends to be associated with a dense layer of shrubs and herbs, including salmonberry, red elderberry, and several ferns.

    20. Ethnobotany Garden - "The Role Of Plants In Society"
    We are dedicated to promoting the hobby and the science of ethnobotany in all its diverse forms.
    http://ethnobotany.yage.net/links.html

    Home
    Discussion Forum Ethnobotany Links Agar Methods ...
    Medicinal Herb FAQ
    A great introduction to the most well known herbs in common use today.
    Mid-South Solanaceae Conservatory
    Dedicated to the preservation, appreciation, and dissemination of the ethnobotanical and medicinal species of the nightshade family.
    Plants For A Future Database Search
    One of the best ethnobotanical search engines on the net. You can search by common name, latin name, use, and much more.
    Ethnobotany Resource Directory
    Excellent resource for all things concerning Ethnobotany.
    Medicinal Plants of the Amazon
    Good site concerning some amazonian plants, as well as ayahuasca.
    CIEER - Centre For International Ethnomedicinal Education and Research
    Terrific up to date information about ethnomedicine and ethnobotany.
    Phytochemical and Ethnobotanical Databases
    Database search that is good for revealing chemical composition of different plants.
    SpiritQuest: Listening to the Plants
    A Quest into the amazon to reveal the mysterious nature of healing and ethnobotany.
    A terrific ethnobotanical database.

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