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Plants as Basis of Human Culture Fibers
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Hemp – Cannabis sativa
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Hemp Fibers Hemp has long been a traditional source for fiber for rope and clothing and even for paper Hemp fibers were used to make fabric as long ago as 8000 BCE - the fibers are so strong that hemp was woven to make ship’s sales from the 5th century BCE until the mid-19th century Hemp was the major source of fiber for paper until 1883, when wood pulp replaced it
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Hemp Fabric
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Chinese guide to making hemp fabric - 1872
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Hemp traditionally used in sailing
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Hemp Paper
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Hemp Declaration of Independence
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Hemp oil lamp
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Abaca or Manila hemp – Musa textilis
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Manila hemp
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Manila hemp rope
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Feral hemp - Ditchweed
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Modern Uses of Cannabis Hemp
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Hemp Cultivation
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Modern Hemp Paper
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Hemp clothes and fabric
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Hemp Cordage
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Hemp Seed – Food and Oil
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Hemp Cosmetics
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Ethnobotany and Geography
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Features of Ethnobotany of Africa
It is a large continent with many different ethnic groups who have very different cultures and uses of plants The continent is geographically very diverse, ranging from bare deserts to lush tropical rain forests. Ethnobotanical use of plants reflects the diversity of habitat, and there is correspondingly low use of plants in the desert regions and great use of plants in the rain forests Humans originated in Africa. Therefore we should see the oldest relationships between plants and people in Africa
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Natural vegetation of Africa
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Ethnosystematics Ethnosystematics (folk knowledge of botanical classification – John Kokwaro from Kenya) is highly developed in Africa because many plants are used in African ethnomedicine and because Africa is rich in dialects and languages due to the large number of ethnic groups. Each group has names for the plants it uses and for describing the relationships of those plants.
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African Concepts of Disease
1. Naturally caused diseases – these are due to tangible material that affects the body’s organs. Such natural diseases are regarded as minor or normal because they can be described by the patient and treated by the healer in strictly physical terms.
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African Concepts of Disease
2. Acute or severe diseases – the common belief (fear) is that as soon as a disease becomes acute or severe, it is due to unnatural causes or intangible forces. This implies that a hostile person is using supernatural powers against the patient or the victim may have transgressed the moral code and incurred the wrath of ancestors. These diseases are characterized as being complicated and serious. They usually have persistent illness. Bewitched or cursed persons require special types of treatment, medicine, and traditional doctors.
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Traditional African Medical Practitioners
1. Herbalists usually use plants to treat patients. 2. Diviners are also herbalists but use divinatory procedures for treatment. 3. Spiritualists hardly use plants at all for treatment. 4. Great therapists utter prayers, incantations, and invocations
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Painting of an Herbalist
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Traditional Herbalist Seybatou Hamdy of Dakar, Senegal
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Sangoma – South African Diviner/Great Threapist
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Traditional African Medical Practitioners
5. Traditional midwives may be obstetricians, herbalists, gynecologists, or pediatricians. They provide health care before, during, and after birth, and also care for newborn infants and young children. 6. Traditional surgeons use special knives, sharpened and tempered according to esoteric procedures, for circumcisions and excisions. Cassava leaves, liquid from snails, and various other ingredients are used as agents to prevent excessive bleeding. 7. Traditional psychiatrists deal with a patients socioreligious antecedents, using a series of rites, that include chants, incantations, and ritual dances, and in which music is played using particular musical instruments.
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African healers Healers are greatly respected in African cultures and that respect is reflected in the names by which they are known. In Swahili the healer is often known as Bwana Mganga (good or great healer) but the respect is based on the healer having good medicine rather than being a good doctor.
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Preparation and Dispensing of Drugs
The part of the plant used in preparing the drug depends on the structure of the plant. It is common to use the bark or roots of trees and shrubs. The Swahili name for herbal medicine is miti shamba meaning “medicine from the tree.” With small plants and herbs, usually the leaves or the whole plant is used.
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Preparation and Dispensing of Drugs
Traditional African medicine is usually limited in that an extract from one plant is used at a time. Only occasionally is an infusion with extracts from two or more plant species given to a patient. This is in contrast to South America where many medicines have mixtures of several species.
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Planting Ocimum kilimandscharicum – Kakamega forest, Kenya
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Harvesting Ocimum kilimandscharicum – Kakamega forest, Kenya
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Preparation of Plant Drugs in Africa
1. Boiling – especially for roots and bark of trees and shrubs. The decoction is taken orally or used for bathing depending on the disease. 2. Soaking in cold water is generally used with crushed leaves or small herbs. The concoction is used as above. 3. Burning is used with leaves and small herbs. The ash can be licked, rubbed onto a wound, soaked in water and drunk or gargled.
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Preparation of Plant Drugs in Africa
4. Chewing is a first-aid method of preparing a drug, especially for treatment of snakebite, stomach disorders, or mouth and throat ailments. 5. Heating or roasting is usually employed in preparing succulent leaves or other plant parts for a poultice. 6. Crushing or pounding normally precedes other methods such as boiling, soaking or burning. Crushed material may be applied directly to a wound, usually after being mixed with some kind of oil
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Poultice of Poke Leaves Phytolaca americana
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Methods of Consumption of Plant Medicines
Aromatic drugs for treating influenza or similar diseases are usually taken in the form of steam. Other drugs are often taken with food to make them more palatable. Usually they are taken with liquid foods – pastoral tribes take drugs with milk, other groups use soup, porridge (especially from African millet flour Eleusine coracana), honey, blood, and various kinds of local beers.
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The Ordeal Bean of Calabar
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The Calabar region - circled below
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The Calabar Bean – Physostigma venenosum
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Member of the Egbo Society
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Trial by Esere or the Ordeal Bean
The Efik of Nigeria believed the bean possessed the power to reveal and destroy witches. The accused witch was made to undergo a trial by ordeal, drinking water to which had been added eight mashed ordeal beans. The poison acted rapidly; the accused's mouth would shake and the mucosal membranes discharge. If the accused could raise his right arm and regurgitate (very unlikely), then the person was considered innocent of witchcraft. If not, the witch died a horrible death from paralytic asphyxia.
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The Calabar Bean
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Medicines from Calabar Bean
Physostigmine is used to treat certain types of glaucoma Derivatives neostigmine and pyridostigmine are used for myasthenia gravis The methyl carbamate family of insecticides came from ordeal bean research
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Ethnobotany of North America
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Ethnobotany of North America
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Food Production in Pacific Northwest – Salmon Nation
At one time people were thought to be almost exclusively hunter-gatherers Tobacco only domesticated plant in cultivation But many other plants were harvested and managed to increase growth Lowland meadows were commonly burned to encourage growth of edible camas lilies (Camassia sp. – F. Liliaceae)
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Nancy Turner – University of Victoria
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Field of Camas lilies - Oregon
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Camas lily flower – Camassia esculenta
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Nez Perce Woman with Harvest of Camas bulbs ~ 1900
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Modern Harvest and Cooking of Camas – British Columbia
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Management of Food Plants
Mountainsides and upland meadows were also burned periodically to encourage the production of berries such as thimbleberry (Rubus parviflorus – F. Rosaceae), blackcap Rubus leucodermis, and blueberries and huckleberries (Vaccinium sp. - F. Ericaceae the heaths)
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Thimbleberry – Rubus parviflorus
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Blackcap berries – Rubus leucodermis
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Blueberry – Vaccinium corymbosum
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Red huckleberry – Vaccinium parviflorum (Ericaceae)
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Management of Food Plants
Species with edible underground parts such as tiger lily Lilium columbianum, yellow avalanche lily Erythronium grandiflorum, and spring beauty (the “Indian potato”) Claytonea lanceolata (F. Portulacaceae – the purslanes), were also encouraged by periodic burning
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Tiger lily – Lilium columbianum
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Avalanche lily – Erythronium grandiflorum
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Western Spring beauty – Claytonia lanceolata
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Management of Food Plants
Foods such as springbank clover rhizomes (Trifolium wormskioldii – F. Fabaceae), and Pacific silverweed roots (Potentilla anserina subsp. pacifica F. Rosaceae) on the coast, and interior plants such as spring beauty, yellow avalanche lily, and bitterroot Lewisia rediviva (F. Portulacaceae), were all harvested intensively from the same digging grounds over many years
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Springbank clover - Trifolium wormskioldii
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Pacific silverweed – Potentilla anserina subsp. pacifica
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Bitterroot – Lewisia redivia
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