|
|
|
|
![]() |
New Plant Sources for Drugs and Foods from the New York Botanical Garden Herbarium
Harvard University Press, 1982 Cloth: 978-0-674-61765-0 Library of Congress Classification QK99.A1V66 1982 Dewey Decimal Classification 581.63
ABOUT THIS BOOK
ABOUT THIS BOOK
This companion volume to Siri von Reis's previous exploration of ethnobotanical notes in the Harvard herbaria brings to light a new array of plants with drug or food potential, offering wide-ranging possible applications for pharmacologists, chemists, botanists, and even anthropologists. Following the same criteria as in earlier investigations, the authors have examined the vast holdings of The New York Botanical Garden Herbarium to select little-known plant uses and to record any note suggesting biodynamic constituents--i.e., those having effects on living tissue--from skin irritants and poisons and medications of any kind to foods, beverages, and spices. They have also included species whose applications suggest other kinds of unreported chemical activity, plants associated with magic or ritual which affected people in some unusual way. See other books on: Catalogs | Catalogs and collections | Foods | Medicinal plants | Plants, Edible See other titles from Harvard University Press |
Nearby on shelf for Botany / General:
| |