Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_E - Ethnobotany
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 3     41-60 of 66    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Ethnobotany:     more books (100)
  1. Plants and People in Ancient Ecuador: The Ethnobotany of the Jama River Valley (Case Studies in Archaeology Series.) by Deborah M. Pearsall, 2003-02-06
  2. Applied Ethnobotany: People, Wild Plant Use and Conservation by Anthony Cunningham, 2001-03-01
  3. Ethnobotany of the Gitksan Indians of British Columbia (Mercury Series) by Harlan I. Smith, 1997-07
  4. Wild Harvest in the Heartland: Ethnobotany in Missouri's Little Dixie by Justin M. Nolan, 2007-11-28
  5. Ethnobotany of Pohnpei: Plants, People, and Island Culture by Michael J. Balick, 2009-02-28
  6. Mayo Ethnobotany: Land, History, and Traditional Knowledge in Northwest Mexico by David Yetman, Thomas Van Devender, 2002-01-07
  7. Huastec Mayan Ethnobotany by Janis B. Alcorn, 1984-08
  8. Islands, Plants and Polynesians: An Introduction to Polynesian Ethnobotany
  9. ETHNOBOTANY OF THE HAWAIIANS by Beatrice H. Krauss, 1978
  10. The Nature and Status of Ethnobotany (Anthropological papers ; no. 67) by R. Ford, 1994-06-01
  11. Ethnobotany
  12. Ethnobotany of the Kanis by E. Harrison and Ramesh N. M.B. Viswanathan, 2006-01-01
  13. Ethnobotany of the Chacobo Indians, Beni, Bolivia (Advances in Economic Botany, Vol 4) (Advances in Economic Botany, Vol 4) by Brian M. Boom, 1987-02-20
  14. Ethnobotany of the Gilbert Islands (Bernice P. Bishop Museum bulletin) by Katharine Luomala, 1953

41. Applied Ethnobotany
Applied ethnobotany People, Wild Plant Use and Conservation, Anthony B. Cunningham. 2001, Earthscan, London. This manual focuses on an issue crucial to
http://peopleandplants.org/whatweproduce/Books/Appliedethno.htm
home who we are what we do where we work ... back Applied Ethnobotany Applied Ethnobotany: People, Wild Plant Use and Conservation, Anthony B. Cunningham.
2001, Earthscan, London. This manual focuses on an issue crucial to rural development and conservation: the impact of harvesting of wild plants by people. It thus covers the borderland between cultural and biological diversity. It is intended as a practical guide to approaches and field methods for participatory work between resource-users and field researchers. In particular, it is aimed at African students or professionals working in conservation, rural development or as national park managers who have to make resource management decisions. However, other regions of the world are not neglected and the book is of general relevance. The emphasis is on how to identify the most urgent problems, needs and opportunities relating to wild plant use and resource management. The manual provides practical guidelines for research which interface applied ecological approaches with the knowledge and expertise of local resource-users. Chapter headings:
  • Conservation and context: different times, different views

42. ASU Research E-Magazine: It's Not Easy Being An Ethnobotanist, Uh, Green
ethnobotany involves the plants we eat, the fibers we wear, the herbal extracts in our medicines, the trees in buildings that shelter us,
http://researchmag.asu.edu/stories/ethnobot.html
A magazine of scholarship and creative activity at Arizona State University Go to:
Home Page

Printer-friendly Version

Social Science
Anthropology ... Botany Related ASU Research Stories
Botany Research Comes Full Circle (sidebar)
Take Me to Your Weaver (feature) Related ASU Web Sites
Department of Life Sciences, ASU West
Publication Date: Spring/Summer 1997 Ethnobotany is a broader and more consequential endeavor. It involves the plants we eat, the fibers we wear, the herbal extracts in our medicines, the trees in buildings that shelter us, and even the flowers we cultivate and cut to beautify our homes. Unfortunately, the challenges of being an ethnobotanist do not end with popular misconceptions. It has not been easy for ethnobotanists to find a home in the scientific community. Go to: Social Science Anthropology Life Science Botany ... Contact Info

43. Drugs From Plants - Ethnobotany And Chemistry
Drugs from Plants ethnobotany and Chemistry. ethnobotany Chemistry. There are over a hundred chemical substances that have been derived from plants
http://chemistry.about.com/library/weekly/aa061403a.htm
zOBT=" Ads" zGCID=" test1" zGCID+=" test15" zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') zDO=0 z160=zpreC(160,600);z336=zpreC(336,280);z728=zpreC(728,90);z155=zpreC(336,155);zItw=160 Search
Chemistry
var h2=document.getElementsByTagName("h2")[0];if(h2.getElementsByTagName("a")[0].firstChild.nodeValue.length>28)h2.className="long";
  • Home Education Chemistry
    More from About.com
    Browse Chemistry
    • General Chemistry Demos / Experiments Growing Crystals Chemistry for Kids ... Topics A-Z Search
      See More About:
      Drugs from Plants There are over a hundred chemical substances that have been derived from plants for use as drugs and medicines. This is by no means a comprehensive list of all of the plants, names of chemicals, or uses for those chemicals, but it should serve as a useful starting point for further research. For your convenience, I have listed the common name of a plant next to its scientific name. Be advised that common names are very imprecise and often assigned to completely different plants, so use the scientific name when looking for additional information concerning a plant. Drug/Chemical Action Plant Source Acetyldigoxin Cardiotonic Digitalis lanata (Grecian foxglove, woolly foxglove)
  • 44. Ethnobotany Bibliography
    A Hand Book of ethnobotany / S. K. Jain and V. Mudgal. 1st ed. Dehra Dun, Bishen Singh Mahendra Pal Singh. xiv, 309 p. ills. 24 cm. ISBN 8121101778
    http://www.utexas.edu/courses/stross/ant393_files/ethnobotbib.htm
    BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ETHNOBOTANY BOOKS Abbiw, Daniel K. Useful Plants of Ghana Intermediate Technology Publications. *Alcorn, Janis Huastec Mayan Ethnobotany Austin, U. of Texas Press *Alexiades, M.N. (ed.) 1996. Selected Guidelines for Ethnobotanical Research: A Field Manual . The New York Botanical Garden, New York. Allegro, John The Sacred Mushroom and the Cross The Subsidy from Nature: Palm Forests, Peasantry and Development on an Amazonian Frontier . Columbia University Press, New York. *Anderson, Edgar Plants, Man And Life Berkeley, U. of Calif. Press. Anderson, Edward F. Peyote: The Divine Cactus Anderson, Edward F. Plants and People of the Golden Triangle: Ethnobotany of the Hill Tribes of Northern Thailand Portland: Timber Press / Dioscorides Press. Antonil, A.J. Mama Coca (Hassle Free Press) Ayensu, E.S. 1978. Medicinal Plants of West Africa Algonac, MI: Reference Publications. The Badianus Manuscript (Codex Barberini, Latin 241), An Aztec Herbal of Introduction, translation and annotations by Emily Walcott Emmart. Baltimore.

    45. FSU Biology Department - Ethnobotany
    This new ethnobotany program will accept its first students in the fall of 2007. The ethnobotany program is an interdisciplinary major that allows students
    http://www.frostburg.edu/dept/biol/Undergraduate/Ethnobotany.htm
    Frostburg State University Home
    Department of Biology
    Contact Us

    Back to Main Undergraduate page

    Undergraduate Information for Ethnobotany Major This new Ethnobotany program will accept its first students in the fall of 2007. The Ethnobotany program is an interdisciplinary major that allows students to integrate science and culture as a way of understanding human reliance on plants and the environment. After obtaining a background in plant sciences, biogeography and cultural studies, students choose a track to follow within the major dependent on their particular interest. There are three concentrations within this major The pharmacological concentration was developed to provide students with the courses necessary to advance in the fields of medicine and herbalism. Students in this track will receive a strong education in chemistry to strengthen their understanding of how the chemical constituents of plants react with the human body. Students who follow this concentration will gain the skills to acquire the advanced training to work as an herbalist consultant for holistic veterinarians, doctors, and alternative health settings, drug detoxification programs, detention centers and working in laboratory technician positions in research settings.

    46. The Santa Barbara Independent Introducing Jan Timbrook’s Chumash Ethnobotan
    Aug 30, 2007 That day is today, and that bible is Jan Timbrook’s Chumash ethnobotany Plant Knowledge Among the Chumash People of Southern California.
    http://www.independent.com/news/2007/aug/30/introducing-jan-timbrooks-emchumash-
    var gaJsHost = (("https:" == document.location.protocol) ? "https://ssl." : "http://www."); document.write(unescape("%3Cscript src='" + gaJsHost + "google-analytics.com/ga.js' type='text/javascript'%3E%3C/script%3E")); //SYNTAX: ddtabmenu.definemenu("tab_menu_id", integer OR "auto") ddtabmenu.definemenu("ddtabs1", 2) //initialize Tab Menu with ID "ddtabs1" and select 1st tab by default Personals Photo: Paul Wellman
    Introducing Jan Timbrook’s Chumash Ethnobotany
    Not Just Bushes Anymore Thursday, August 30, 2007 By Matt Kettmann Contact Article Tools Print friendly
    E-mail story
    Tip Us Off
    iPod friendly
    Comments
    Bookmark This
    del.icio.us.
    Digg!
    furl
    google
    newsvine
    reddit
    technorati Facebook Yahoo!
    Call it the Santa Barbara naturalist’s creation story: In the beginning, everything is a bush. On the first day, we discover some bushes are different than others. On the second day, we learn which is really a bush, which is a flower, and which is a tree. On the third day, we can name a plant or two or five or dozens. On the fourth day, we start to understand the role of each plant in the ecosystem. On the fifth day, we realize these bushes may also be useful to humans, specifically those who lived here centuries before us. On the sixth day, we come to cherish, respect, and protect the plants that surround us. And on the seventh day, we finally get our bible. That day is today, and that bible is Jan Timbrook’s

    47. RCF: Introduction For Agroforestry And Ethnobotany
    There are a number of publications that describe the ethnobotany of medicinal plants in the upper Amazon. Richard Evans Schultes was a pioneer in this field
    http://www.rainforestconservation.org/data_sheets/agroforestry/intro.html
    Introduction to Agroforestry and Ethnobotany pages:
    Jacaranda copaia
    Young huamansamana trees growing with aguaje palms
    Carica papaya
    Papayas ready to be shipped to market.
    Palms may be the most useful of all forest plants. The house floor, sides, roof and hammock are all made from palms. By Jim Penn Purpose and concept of this work
    Ethnicity and Ethnobotany

    It must be remembered that urban dwellers in the cities of Iquitos, Pucallpa, and Yurimaguas may also rely heavily on plant material for their health care needs. Both urban and rural people in the region have strong beliefs about when or how plants should be used in treatments. "Dieting" or abstaining from certain foods and activities is an important part of the process. Avoiding fat, spices, heat, cold, and sexual activity during treatments are just a few examples of this. People will often combine traditional plant remedies with modern medicines purchased in stores or pharmacies. Religious elements are also integrated into these treatments. Gender
    There is folklore that pertains specifically to men about the cultivation or use of these plants, but gender-specific beliefs seem most often to apply to women. Women may avoid entering gardens during menstruation or pregnancy. Certain types of harvests are usually not to be done by women or young girls (such as climbing fruit trees). Even in urban areas, many women will avoid watering plants during menstruation. The female reproductive cycle has a strong influence on the use of plants by women.

    48. Ethnobotany Table
    ethnobotany Table Table Key. Plant. Uses (parts). Shoshone/ Bannock Use. Distribution. Status. Comments / References
    http://www.stoller-eser.com/Flora/ethnobotany_table.htm
    This page uses frames, but your browser doesn't support them.

    49. Science Museum Of Minnesota - Oh No! Ethnobotany
    Oh No! ethnobotany Oh No! ethnobotany, a hazard communicationtraining program that addresses health and safety issues inherent in the handling and storage
    http://www.smm.org/anthropology/ohnoethnobotany/
    @import "/files/css/8f6cc86013a97b6768618669336cfad8.css"; @import "/static/udm/udm-style.css";
    • Visit
      Oh No! Ethnobotany
      Oh No! Ethnobotany , a hazard communication-training program that addresses health and safety issues inherent in the handling and storage of hazardous ethnobotany, was designed, developed, and prototyped at the Science Museum of Minnesota by Rose Kubiatowicz. The program looks beyond the wide range of residual toxic chemicals present from the treatment of an artifact to specifically address concerns raised by toxic chemicals inherent in the object itself. Oh No! Ethnobotany is a concept that refers to both hazardous ethnobotany and also to a hazard communication-training program that focuses on establishing workplace policies and procedures that address safe handling and storage. Ethnobotany is defined as the study of how and why people use and conceptualize plants in their local environments. It is the scientific study of the relationship between people and plants. Most commonly ethnobotany refers to the study of indigenous uses of plants as medicine, food, natural resources, clothing, and ritual. Although ethnobotany is distinctive as an academic field of study, it maintains a multidisciplinary character in both theory and methods. Research is often conducted combining botanical theories with those from anthropology, as well as from other fields including linguistics, pharmacology, musicology, toxicology, architecture, conservation, biology and many others.

    50. Is Guaiacum Sanctum Effective Against Arthritis? An Ethnobotany Case - Part I -
    Is Guaiacum sanctum Effective Against Arthritis? An ethnobotany Case Part I - by Eric Ribbens, Barbra Burdett, and Angela Green, Department of Biological
    http://www.sciencecases.org/ethnobotany/ethnobotany.asp
    Is Guaiacum sanctum Effective Against Arthritis?
    An Ethnobotany Case
    by
    Eric Ribbens Barbra Burdett , and Angela Green
    Department of Biological Science
    Western Illinois University
    Figure 1: Seeds of Guaiacum sanctum Dr. Beth Tonoany is a tropical population ecologist who has been studying an unusual tree, Guaiacum sanctum , which once grew throughout the dry tropical forests of Central America as well as on some of the Caribbean islands. Guaiacum sanctum produces a wood called lignum vitae , and is known in Costa Rica and other Spanish-speaking countries as . The wood is extremely heavy because it contains extensive deposits of resin ( Howes, 1949 ) and it will sink if placed in water ( Wilson and Eisner, 1968 ). During World War I and II it was extensively harvested for use in the ship-building industry because the wood, which does not split easily, is self-lubricating due to its high resin content. The wood is very durable, and was in high demand for constructing bearing sleeves to support ship propellor shafts ( Scurlock, 1987

    51. Toward A Bioregional State: Development Unincorporated: Ethnobotany, Languages,
    Development Unincorporated ethnobotany, Languages, and the Bioregional State The bioregional state is simultaneously a form of ethnobotany preservation
    http://biostate.blogspot.com/2007/04/development-unincorporated-ethnobotany.html
    @import url("http://www.blogger.com/css/blog_controls.css"); @import url("http://www.blogger.com/dyn-css/authorization.css?targetBlogID=16635364"); var BL_backlinkURL = "http://www.blogger.com/dyn-js/backlink_count.js";var BL_blogId = "16635364";
    Toward a Bioregional State
    Friday, April 13, 2007
    Development Unincorporated: Ethnobotany, Languages, and the Bioregional State
    "The twentieth century is not going to be remembered for its wars or its technological innovations, but rather as the era in which we stood byneither actively endorsed nor passively acceptedthe massive destruction of both biological and cultural diversity on the planet....You know genocide as the physical extinction of a people is universally condemned, but ethnocidethe destruction of a people's way of lifeis not only not condemned, it's universally in many quarters celebrated as part of a development strategy....In the end then it comes down to a choice: do we really want to live in a monochromatic world full of monotony or do we want to embrace a polychromatic world of diversity." - Wade Davis
    Development, Inc., to Development Unincorporated: the Bioregional State as Ethnobotany Preservation, Expansion, and Encouragement

    52. THE TREE OF KNOWLEDGE, ANADENANTHERA
    The ethnobotany of these species was virtually overlooked by European ethnobotany also traces the development of modern Medicine and Herbalism along
    http://www.utopiasprings.com/anad.htm
    Anadenanthera Thumbnails Are Linked To 50kb Pictures
    The Legume Genus Anadenathera consists of at least two important species found adjacent to the rainforests of South America and the Carribean. A. peregina is found along the tropical savannahs of northern South America. A. columbrina is found along the Andes. Anadenanthera is a beautiful delicate fern-leaved tree with spreading branches, white puff-ball flowers and dark leather brown pods with half inch diameter black pip seeds. It resembles the Lead Tree, the Albizia and many other legume trees, but it has the most delicate doubly pinnately-compound mimosa leaves. A. peregina is not frost tolerant, but A. columbrina is somewhat more hardy. It is used commonly for fence posts by the uninformed and is rapidly dissapearing in some areas. More details and pictures are arriving daily, including xerox copies of the leaves and seeds, chemical structures for the Serotonin Group and more! Keep those cards and emails coming!
    The ethnobotany of these species was virtually overlooked by European conquerors, and the secret remained hidden for almost 500 years, while so many other New World plants were extensively exploited worldwide. It won't be long before these species are also used along with the many other spices and drugs of the New World. These links are a good beginning towards the understanding and wise utilization of these sacred trees. They have so much to tells us...
    Bon Voyage!

    53. Ethnobotany - Books - Compare Prices, Reviews And Buy At NexTag - Price - Review
    ethnobotany 47 results like the The Great Cacti ethnobotany Biogeography, Cultural Uses of Plants A Guide to Learning About ethnobotany, ethnobotany,
    http://www.nextag.com/ethnobotany/search-html
    Products Mortgage Travel Degrees ...
    ethnobotany
    Narrow These Results
    By Category:
    Non-Fiction Science Nature more ... ... All Categories
    By Price:
    Under $10
    Over $100
    By Subgenre:
    Life Sciences / Botany
    Life Sciences / Horticulture

    Life Sciences / Ecology

    Environmental Science
    ...
    Life Sciences / Biology
    By Format:
    Paperback
    Hardcover
    By Author:
    David Yetman
    Justin Nolan

    Amadeo M. Rea

    Anthony B. Cunningham
    ...
    more ...
    By Seller:
    Cokesbury eBay TextbooksRus DeepDiscountDVD ... more ...
    By Keyword:
    Showing 1 - 15 of 47 matches, sorted by Best Match Best Match Price: Low to High Price: High to Low ... Ethnobotany by Gabriell D. Paye No user ratings See All Non-Fiction Compare Prices Ethnobotany : Principles and Applications by C. M. Cotton No user ratings See All Science $50 to $107 Compare Prices at 6 Sellers Ethnobotany - The Historical Ecology of Plant Ut... by William Balee No user ratings See All Nature $4 to $32 Compare Prices at 3 Sellers Ethnobotany : A Reader by Paul E. Minnis No user ratings See All Science $10 to $24 Compare Prices at 5 Sellers Native Plants of Southern Nevada: An Ethnobotany by David Rhode No user ratings $18 to $25 Compare Prices at 5 Sellers Ethnobotany of the Gila River Pima by Amadeo M. Rea

    54. Washington Native Plant Society: Ethnobotany Resources At The Seattle Public Lib
    Information about the ethnobotany resources at the Seattle Public Library provided by the Seattle Public Library and the Washington Aboretum.
    http://www.wnps.org/research/ethnobot.html
    About WNPS
    Home

    Annual Report

    ByLaws
    ...
    Policies
    Activities
    Conservation

    Ecosystems

    Education

    Landscaping
    ... Photo Gallery Priorities
    Garry Oak

    Invasive Species
    Shrub Steppe Programs Growing Wild Ivy OUT WNPS Stewards An Affiliate of Earthshare of Washington Home Research
    Ethnobotany Resources at the Seattle Public Library
    Information provided by the Seattle Public Library in conjunction with the Washington Park Arboretum In its broadest sense, ethnobotany is the study of how people interact with plants. The tradition of using plants to fulfill daily needs dates back to the beginning of human civilization and continues today. We all practice ethnobotany when we decorate our homes with plants, add spices to our meals, or select a certain type of wood to build something useful. Major efforts have been made over the last 50 years to record the historical and modern uses of plants, whether they be for medicinal, spiritual, practical, or culinary purposes. Here are some of the sources at the Seattle Public Library that provide information on the many ways plants have met the needs of people worldwide Ethnobotany The Use of Plants by People (PDF)
    Washington Park Aboretum
    The Washington Park Arboretum, established in 1934, is a living museum of woody plants maintained for the purposes of conservation, education, research, and display. As a regional public garden with more than 4,600 different types of plants from over 60 countries around the world, the Arboretum is a cultural treasure with international horticultural significance.

    55. Institute Of Contemporary Ethnobotany - Cascadia Food Not Lawns
    Classes and workshops offered through the Institute of Contemporary ethnobotany.
    http://www.foodnotlawns.com/contemporary_ethnobotany.html
    Institute of Contemporary Ethnobotany
    Click here for: Ecuador Highlights 2006 Click here for: The Seed Ambassadors Project Click here for: Columbines School of Botanical Studies Click here for: Southwest School of Botanical Medicine ... Click here for: Unbelievable Cell Life Anemae
    EVENTS IN AND AROUND EUGENE:
    The Institute of Contemporary Ethnobotany Spring Events 2007:
    4/28 ETHNO-ECOLOGY FIELD TRIP Meet at 9:00-6:00ish $15-$45 Walks, talks, discussions and activities will explore the roles of native and nonnative plants in our cultivated and noncultivated landscapes and ecosystems. Early registration fee (before April 1) is $75; regular registration fee is $90 for the weekend, or $50 per day. Organic meals and lodging are available. This event is supported in part by the Institute of Contemporary Ethnobotany . Contact Chris Roth, nature(at)lostvalley,org, 541-937-2567 ext. 116. www.lostvalley.org/nature 5/21 PLANTS OF ECUADOR SLIDESHOW; 7-9:30 pm NPSO Mtg. EWEB Plaza. With Tobias. A slide show presentation on a six-week, ecological adventure throughout Ecuador, one of the biologically richest countries on the planet. Highlights will include: amazing orchid diversity, breath-taking Andean views, colorful birds, crazy insects, political graffitti, and more!

    56. Lemieux Library: Taqwsheblu Vi Hilbert Ethnobotanical Garden At Seattle Universi
    The Taqwsheblu Vi Hilbert Ethnobotanical Garden was dedicated on Seattle University s campus in April 2006. To honor this garden and support its educational
    http://www.seattleu.edu/lemlib/ResearchPath/SubGuides/Ethnobotany.htm
    Subject Guide Ethnobotany Research guide created by Kristen Shuyler
    Email: shuylerk(at)seattleu.edu
    Chat: shuylerk (AIM, Yahoo, Google) or shuylerk@hotmail.com (MSN) The Taqwsheblu Vi Hilbert Ethnobotanical Garden was dedicated on Seattle University's campus in April 2006. To honor this garden and support its educational and outreach mission, Lemieux Library acquired books related to ethnobotany, especially those focused on the relationships between Puget Sound's native plants and Native people. Many thanks to Janice Murphy and Rob Efird for their help in selecting materials.
    Listed below are these books (and others that were already in our collection), grouped into these subjects: General Ethnobotany Pacific Northwest Ethnobotany North American Ethnobotany South American Ethnobotany ... Pacific Northwest Native Plants General ethnobotany
    Balick, Michael J.

    57. Soma Among The Armenians, Ethnobotany, Anthropology, Armenian Mythology, Vahagn,
    The work of Flattery and Schwartz is a fascinating, scholarly study which, without a doubt, has raised the level of ethnobotanical research.
    http://rbedrosian.com/soma.htm
    Soma among the Armenians
    by Robert Bedrosian
    Soma was a god, a plant, and an intoxicating beverage. It is referenced in some 120 of 1028 verses of the Indian Rig Veda (mid second millenium B.C.). Haoma was its Iranian counterpart. Although the Iranian Avesta mentions haoma less frequently, there is little doubt that the substances were similar or identical. In both India and Iran, at some point the true identity of soma/haoma was forgotten, and substitutes for it were adopted. It has been suggested that abandonment of the divine entheogen and its replacement by surrogates occurred because the original substance was no longer available or was difficult to obtain once the proto Indo-Iranians left their "original homeland" and emigrated (1). During the past two hundred years, scholars have tried with varying degrees of success to identify this mysterious plant which was at the base of early Indo-Iranian worship. As early as 1794, Sir William Jones suggested that haoma was "a species of mountain rue", or Peganum harmala L. (Arm.

    58. Careers In Ethnobotany
    Job Listings from the Chronicle of Higher Education. ***************************************. Graduate Programs in ethnobotany
    http://www.siu.edu/~ebl/careers.htm
    Ethnobotanical Leaflets Journal Contents Back Issues Book Reviews Research Notes ... Botany Resources
    Careers in Ethnobotany, Agriculture and the Biosciences
    Higher Ed Jobs Academic Keys Academic Careers Online Earthworks-Job Opportunities ... Undergraduate Studies in Ethnobotany

    59. ETHNOBOTANY LINKS
    ethnobotany Database search or browse. People and Plants Initiative search. TAMU Herbarium Specimen Browser search. TAMU Checklist of US Vascular Flora
    http://uts.cc.utexas.edu/~strossb/links/ethnobotany.htm
    ETHNOBOTANY LINKS Particular Societies Native Plant Society of Texas Useful Wild Plants Project American Botanical Council / Herbalgram Particular Treatises Zapotec Herbs MA thesis Particular Plants Carnivorous Plant FAQ and Links Carnivorous Plant Database Carnivorous Plant Photos The Maize Page Miscellaneous Flora Mesoamericana Photos of herbs by botanical name - U. of Washington Ethnobotany Database search or browse People and Plants Initiative search TAMU Herbarium Specimen Browser search TAMU Checklist of US Vascular Flora search TAMU Vascular Plant Image Gallery search TAMU Checklist of Vascular Plants of Texas Roy Ellen Paper Indigenous knowledge of the rainforest Roy Ellen Paper Anthropological approaches.... Famine Foods Database of famine foods, by family, genus Raintree Database of rainforest plants, indexed by name, disorder, action Courses LINKS Ethnobotany bibliography Mesoamerican ethnobotany bibliography syllabus Mesoamerican Ethnobotany Home ... Comments

    60. Wiley::Ethnobotany: Principles And Applications
    Interest in ethnobotany has increased dramatically in recent years. The search for new medicines by the pharmaceutical industry has turned to plant natural
    http://www.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-047195537X.html
    United States Change Location

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 3     41-60 of 66    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | Next 20

    free hit counter