20/2/22. How Indians Use Wild Plants for Food, Medicine and Crafts. "Learn the natural ways of the Chippewa Indians with this great book from Dover." ' Texas Kitchen and Garden and MoreThe uses of plants ' for food, for medicine, for arts, crafts, and dyeing ' among the Chippewa Indians of Minnesota and Wisconsin show the great extent to which they understood and utilized natural resources. In this book those traditions are captured, providing a wealth of new material for those interested in natural food, natural cures, and native crafts.In separate sections describing the major areas of use, Miss Densmore, an ethnologist with the Smithsonian Institution, details the uses of nearly 200 plants with emphasis on wild plants and lesser-known uses. For those interested in natural foods she gives extensive coverage to the gathering and preparation of maple sugar and wild rice, as well as preparations for beverages from leaves and twigs of common plants, seasonings including mint and bearberry, the methods of preparing wild rice and corn, cultivated and wild vegetables, and wild fruits and berries. On Indian medicines she tells the basic methods of gathering plants and the basic surgical and medical methods. Then she gives a complete list of the plants with their botanical names, uses, parts used, preparation and administration, and other notes and references. Also covered are plants used as charms, plants used in natural dyes, and plants in the useful and decorative arts including uses for household items, toys, mats, twine, baskets, bows, and tools, with special emphasis on the uses of birch bark and cedar.
How Indians use wild plantsfor food / F. Densmore
9780486230191
Uitgeverij;Dover Publications Inc.
Paperback. 1974. Voorzijde iets minder mooi.


