Economic Botany

, Volume 30, Issue 1, pp 57–66 | Cite as

Hallucinogenic snuff drugs of the Yanomamo Caburiwe-Teri in the Cauaburi river, Brazil

  • Charles Brewer-Carias
  • Julian A. Steyermark
Article

Keywords

Bark Economic Botany Venezuela Irritate Sensation Indian Settlement 
These keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.

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Literature Cited

  1. Biocca, Ettore.Yanoáma. Leonardo da Vinca. Bari. 1969.Google Scholar
  2. Chagnon, Napoleon A.Yanomamö, the Fierce People. 142 pp. Holt, Rinehart, and Winston. 1968.Google Scholar
  3. Cocco, P. Luis.Iyëwei-teri. Escuela Técnica Popular Don Bosco. Caracas. 1972.Google Scholar
  4. Schultes, R. E. De plantis toxicariis e Mundo Novo tropicale commentationes V.Virola as an orally administered hallucinogen. Bot. Mus. Leafl. Harvard Univ.22: 229–240. 1969.Google Scholar
  5. Schultes, R. E. and B. Holmstedt. De plantis toxicariis e Mundo Novo tropicale commentationes II. The vegetal ingredients of the myristicaceous snuffs of the northwest Amazon. Rhodora70: 113–160. 1968.Google Scholar
  6. Seitz, Georg J. Epená, the intoxicating snuff powder of the Waika Indians and the Tucano medicine man, Agostino, in Efron, D. (Ed.) Ethnopharmacologic Search for Psychoactive Drugs, U.S. Publ. Health Serv. Publ. No.1645: 315–338. 1967.Google Scholar

Copyright information

© The New York Botanical Garden 1976

Authors and Affiliations

  • Charles Brewer-Carias
  • Julian A. Steyermark
    • 1
  1. 1.Instituto BotanicoCaracasVenezuela

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