- published: 15 May 2012
- views: 421
- author: 73rdStProductions
26:59

Introduction: The Culture of Ethnobotany
Video 02 of the Introduction to Ethnobotany series. Presented by Will McClatchey. This pre...
published: 15 May 2012
author: 73rdStProductions
Introduction: The Culture of Ethnobotany
Video 02 of the Introduction to Ethnobotany series. Presented by Will McClatchey. This presentation introduces the concept that plants are all around us. They are our food, medicines, clothing, housing, and a thousand other things in our lives. Ethnobotany is the scientific study of interactions between people and plants. Since plants are integral parts of so many kinds of cultural activities they play important roles in how we define culture and ourselves.
- published: 15 May 2012
- views: 421
- author: 73rdStProductions
86:30

Dr. Michael Balick: SB Southampton Dean's Lecture Series
Dr. Michael Balick is the VP of Botanical Science, Director and Philecology Curator of the...
published: 06 May 2010
author: sbcomm
Dr. Michael Balick: SB Southampton Dean's Lecture Series
Dr. Michael Balick is the VP of Botanical Science, Director and Philecology Curator of the Institute of Economic Botany at the New York Botanical Garden. For nearly three decades, Dr. Balick has studied the relationship between plants and people, working with traditional cultures in tropical, subtropical, and desert environments. He is a specialist in the field known as ethnobotany, working with indigenous cultures to document their plant knowledge, understand the environmental effects of their traditional management systems, and develop sustainable utilization systems-while ensuring that the benefits of such work are always shared with local communities. Dr. Balick also conducts research in New York City, studying traditional healing practices in ethnic communities of the urban environment. In addition to ethnobotany, Dr. Balick is an expert on the palm family, an economically important family of plants in the tropics.
- published: 06 May 2010
- views: 2075
- author: sbcomm
18:03

TERENCE McKENNA - Ethnobotany and Shamanism: Psychedelics Before and After History
Sound Photosynthesis presents TERENCE McKENNA - Ethnobotany and Shamanism: Psychedelics Be...
published: 29 Mar 2011
author: soundphotosynthesis
TERENCE McKENNA - Ethnobotany and Shamanism: Psychedelics Before and After History
Sound Photosynthesis presents TERENCE McKENNA - Ethnobotany and Shamanism: Psychedelics Before and After History. Faustin Bray and Brian Wallace recorded this event at California Institute of Integral Studies in San Francisco, California in 1988. For a DVD of the complete lecture please contact www.sound.photosynthesis.com. This is the introductory lecture of a weekend workshop given by Terence McKenna on ethnobotany and shamanism. Contrary to popular belief the entire Sound Photosynthesis archive is publicly available and has been since it's inception. We hold the Sound Photosynthesis recordings of Terence McKenna with his best wishes. Terence understood the nature of the archive Faustin Bray was creating and chose to work with us for decades. Please support our work.
- published: 29 Mar 2011
- views: 2220
- author: soundphotosynthesis
6:07

The Science of Ethnobotany with Dr. Paul Cox.
Time Magazine previously honored Dr. Cox as one of 11 Heroes of Medicine for his ongoing s...
published: 04 Nov 2010
author: ViVaNSE
The Science of Ethnobotany with Dr. Paul Cox.
Time Magazine previously honored Dr. Cox as one of 11 Heroes of Medicine for his ongoing search for new medicines and plants. www.time.com It is rare for a scientist to be renowned in both indigenous and western cultures. Throughout the islands of Polynesia and Southeast Asia, Dr. Paul Alan Cox is known as Nafanua. Nafanua is one of the highest chief titles of Samoa, conferred upon Cox in 1989 by the Samoan people for his diligence and work in rain forest preservation. Cox is also known as one of the worlds top ethnobotanists—scientists who study the use of plants by indigenous people. As an expert in the field of ethnobotany, Cox has served as a professor and Dean at Brigham Young University, and is currently Distinguished Professor at BYUHawaii. He has also held visiting professorships at the University of Melbourne, Uppsala University and at Umeå University; and was honored by King Gustav and Queen Sylvia of Sweden, who invited him to present a command lecture in Stockholm. He was later invited to serve as the first King Carl XVI Gustaf Professor of Environmental Science, a gift from the Swedish Royal Academy of Sciences for the Kings 50th birthday. From 1998 through 2004 he served as Director of the Congressional-chartered National Tropical Botanical Garden in Hawaii and Florida. Cox currently serves as Director of the Institute for Ethnomedicine, a not-for-profit organization with the mission of discovering new medicines from plants used by indigenous peoples. During ...
- published: 04 Nov 2010
- views: 6067
- author: ViVaNSE
2:26

Ethnobotanist Marc Williams speaking on the wild medicinal uses of plantain
Video of Ethonobotanist Marc Williams at Chestnut School of Herbal Medicine near Asheville...
published: 17 May 2010
author: EthnobotanistMarc
Ethnobotanist Marc Williams speaking on the wild medicinal uses of plantain
Video of Ethonobotanist Marc Williams at Chestnut School of Herbal Medicine near Asheville WNC speaking on the wild medicinal uses of plantain. Filmed by Jonathan Poston
- published: 17 May 2010
- views: 2176
- author: EthnobotanistMarc
25:21

Ethnobotany and Conservation in West Africa
Video 43 in the Introduction to Ethnobotany series. Presented by Orou Gaoué. Africa is the...
published: 15 May 2012
author: 73rdStProductions
Ethnobotany and Conservation in West Africa
Video 43 in the Introduction to Ethnobotany series. Presented by Orou Gaoué. Africa is the second largest continent and has the second largest rainforest block. Africa has diverse plant resources and indigenous communities that still rely largely on plants for their livelihood. This episode discusses uses and management of plant resources in West Africa in three parts: First, are presented the distribution of ecological variation and human population density in Africa. People populate mostly the savannah region of the continent, leaving the vast infertile desert and the harsh rainforest regions less populated. Increasing population density and its concentration in the savannah areas is, among other reasons, responsible for high forest degradation rates and high plant harvesting impact in Sub-Saharan Africa. Second, the different indigenous uses of plant resources are reviewed: food, medicine and cosmetic, fodder, firewood and charcoal, building and timber. There is a severe firewood crisis in the region and harvesting non-timber forest products such as tree fodder, tree bark for medicine, is participating to the degradation of the forest. Third is an analysis of indigenous as well as government management strategies of forest and forest resources. Sacred forests and agroforestry parklands are some of the traditional ways of conserving plant species of local interest. The state management strategy has shift from an official protectionism of the state reserve forest, to a ...
- published: 15 May 2012
- views: 154
- author: 73rdStProductions
10:23

Mycol Stevens ::: ethnobotany in the North Carolina mountains
Mycol Stevens ::: ethnobotany in the North Carolina mountains. Mycol takes us on a walk in...
published: 07 Aug 2011
author: swampcast
Mycol Stevens ::: ethnobotany in the North Carolina mountains
Mycol Stevens ::: ethnobotany in the North Carolina mountains. Mycol takes us on a walk in the woods. He identifies edible plants, mushrooms, and teaches us about life in the wild.
- published: 07 Aug 2011
- views: 393
- author: swampcast
10:58

Terence McKenna: The Ethnobotany Of Shamanism - 1/37
Ethnobotany of Shamanism, a 3 day weekend workshop at the California Institute of Integral...
published: 20 Aug 2010
author: McKennaArchive
Terence McKenna: The Ethnobotany Of Shamanism - 1/37
Ethnobotany of Shamanism, a 3 day weekend workshop at the California Institute of Integral Studies in San Francisco featuring Terence McKenna. Includes the introductory lecture on Friday. Originally recorded November 4th -- 6th 1988. "Most software, I think, is written by freaks." "What it [investigating psychedelics] really requires is a love of the peculiar, of the weird, the bizarre, the étrange, the freaky and unimaginable." "Nature and the imagination seem to be the precursors to involvement in the psychedelic experience." "DMT seems to argue, convincingly I might add, that the world is made entirely of something, for want of a better word, we would have to call magic." "By manipulating queuing, by manipulating expectation, you can lead people to a fundamental confrontation, not only with themselves, but with the Other." "What I'm talking about is actually is the Mystery of Being as existential fact. That there is something that haunts this world that can take apart and reduce every single one of us to a mixture of terror and ecstasy, fear and trembling. It is not an idea, that's the primary thing to bear in mind. It's an experience." "Our theories are the weakest part of what we say. What we're working from is the fact of an experience which we need to make sense of." "What we call three dimensional space, and what we call the imagination actually have a contiguous and continuous transformation from one into the other, ... and THIS is big news!" "If you play the ...
- published: 20 Aug 2010
- views: 1240
- author: McKennaArchive
10:32

Omaere ethnobotanical garden Puyo Ecuador
Teresa Shiki President of the Omaere Foundation shares an Overview of the Parque EthnoBota...
published: 05 Aug 2009
author: FundacionOmaere
Omaere ethnobotanical garden Puyo Ecuador
Teresa Shiki President of the Omaere Foundation shares an Overview of the Parque EthnoBotanico in Puyo Ecuador.
- published: 05 Aug 2009
- views: 1233
- author: FundacionOmaere
3:23

In The Caribbean Garden with Ethnobotanist Ina Vandebroek
New York Botanical Garden researcher, Ina Vandebroek, Ph. D., visits the historic Enid A. ...
published: 07 Feb 2011
author: tskoda
In The Caribbean Garden with Ethnobotanist Ina Vandebroek
New York Botanical Garden researcher, Ina Vandebroek, Ph. D., visits the historic Enid A. Haupt Conservatory to talk about some of the plants featured in The Caribbean Garden, and their traditional uses in the Domican communites she works with. For more information visit, www.nybg.org For more about Ina, www.nybg.org
- published: 07 Feb 2011
- views: 805
- author: tskoda
2:10

Ethnobotanist Discusses Her First DMT Experience
VOD release of DMT: The Spirit Molecule in Oct 2011. Visit the official website for more u...
published: 11 Jan 2010
author: dmttsm
Ethnobotanist Discusses Her First DMT Experience
VOD release of DMT: The Spirit Molecule in Oct 2011. Visit the official website for more updates: www.thespiritmolecule.com The Spirit Molecule explores the enigmatic dimethyltryptamine (DMT), a molecule found throughout nature, and considered the most potent psychedelic. In 1995, Dr. Strassman completed the first government-sanctioned, psychedelic research on DMT, with results that may answer humanitys greatest questions.
- published: 11 Jan 2010
- views: 171237
- author: dmttsm
16:58

Cultural Diaspora & Culinary Ethnobotanical Knowledge
Video 15 in the Introduction to Ethnobotany series. Presented by My Lien T. Nguyen. What h...
published: 17 May 2012
author: 73rdStProductions
Cultural Diaspora & Culinary Ethnobotanical Knowledge
Video 15 in the Introduction to Ethnobotany series. Presented by My Lien T. Nguyen. What happens to a culture's food traditions when the people of that culture resettle in a foreign country? This episode examines the history of Vietnamese food in the US resulting from the diaspora of the Vietnamese people after 1975. Concepts discussed include: transported landscapes in the form of Asian food venues, the transfer of key food plants, adoption of new food plants, and the dynamics of culinary knowledge as people reconstruct food traditions in their new homes.
- published: 17 May 2012
- views: 90
- author: 73rdStProductions
0:56

Koro Ethnobotany - Sange Degio - [2b]
Koro-Aka ethnobotany Sange Degeo Yangse / Bana 3km, East Kameng District, Arunachal Prades...
published: 16 Nov 2010
author: EnduringVoices
Koro Ethnobotany - Sange Degio - [2b]
Koro-Aka ethnobotany Sange Degeo Yangse / Bana 3km, East Kameng District, Arunachal Pradesh, India 9 November 2010
- published: 16 Nov 2010
- views: 3515
- author: EnduringVoices
0:14

Koro Ethnobotany - Anthony Degio - [6]
Koro-Aka ethnobotany Anthony Degio Yangse / Bana 3km, East Kameng District, Arunachal Prad...
published: 16 Nov 2010
author: EnduringVoices
Koro Ethnobotany - Anthony Degio - [6]
Koro-Aka ethnobotany Anthony Degio Yangse / Bana 3km, East Kameng District, Arunachal Pradesh, India 9 November 2010
- published: 16 Nov 2010
- views: 34059
- author: EnduringVoices
Youtube results:
3:25

Appalachian Ethnobotany - Natural Plant Dyes and Ginseng Farming
Frostburg State University ethnobotany students conducted documentaries on natural plant d...
published: 18 Dec 2009
author: seekbmx
Appalachian Ethnobotany - Natural Plant Dyes and Ginseng Farming
Frostburg State University ethnobotany students conducted documentaries on natural plant dyes and a local ginseng farmer. Mountain City Traditional Arts presents Appalachian artists & their crafts on Main Street, Frostburg, Maryland. Trailer. More coming soon... For more information visit, sites.google.com
- published: 18 Dec 2009
- views: 1680
- author: seekbmx
0:24

Koro Ethnobotany - Anthony Degio - [7]
Koro-Aka ethnobotany Anthony Degio Yangse / Bana 3km, East Kameng District, Arunachal Prad...
published: 16 Nov 2010
author: EnduringVoices
Koro Ethnobotany - Anthony Degio - [7]
Koro-Aka ethnobotany Anthony Degio Yangse / Bana 3km, East Kameng District, Arunachal Pradesh, India 9 November 2010
- published: 16 Nov 2010
- views: 6623
- author: EnduringVoices
5:48

Koro Ethnobotany: 11 plants and their uses in Koro culture.
Koro ethnobotany: 11 plants and their uses. Anthony Degio Yangse / Bana 3km, East Kameng D...
published: 22 Nov 2010
author: EnduringVoices
Koro Ethnobotany: 11 plants and their uses in Koro culture.
Koro ethnobotany: 11 plants and their uses. Anthony Degio Yangse / Bana 3km, East Kameng District, Arunachal Pradesh, India 9 November 2010 Interviewed by K. David Harrison Filmed and subtitled by Jeremy Fahringer for the Enduring Voices Project
- published: 22 Nov 2010
- views: 2476
- author: EnduringVoices
0:32

Maca (lepidium peruvianum) Traditional Use - Information - Ethnobotany - Black Root, Gelatinized
It is seldom understood that traditionally, maca has always been eaten cooked, it is never...
published: 06 May 2009
author: abyssquick
Maca (lepidium peruvianum) Traditional Use - Information - Ethnobotany - Black Root, Gelatinized
It is seldom understood that traditionally, maca has always been eaten cooked, it is never used traditionally in a raw form. Maca powder frequently sold is actually maca 'flour' or "harina de maca" as it is called (spanish) in Peru and Bolivia. There, it is an inexpensive provincial baking commodity used prolifically in cooking, baking, etc, and consumed in some quantity. The developed standardized therapeutic product is "gelatinized" maca, and to a lesser extent, the freeze-dried juice forms. When people eat raw maca flour, as many are doing, the side effects are often present - it can disrupt the thyroid (maca is cruciferous, like turnips or broccoli) - and it can also cause digestive upset due to it's thick, tough fiber content. This is why in Peru it is always cooked. I am constantly encountering people who have a neutral or negative experience with maca due either to lack of product potency, or reactions to the uncooked hypocotdyl. Taking maca flour in pills (or anything under 5-10g /day of the plain herb) won't give a desired therapeutic result in most people. It's just not potent enough to do so in a raw, or uncooked form. Read the comments after this article, to see what we are talking about: www.highonhealth.org For resources detailing maca's traditional uses, and how it works in the body, I recommend: Chris Kilham's "Tales From the Medicine Trail" or "Hot Plants" Leslie Taylor, ND "The Healing Power of Rainforest Herbs" - www.rain-tree.com - (the entry on maca ...
- published: 06 May 2009
- views: 5450
- author: abyssquick