Aboriginal plant use in Canada's northwest boreal forest / by Robin J. Marles et al. Published by UBC Press through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program (BPIDP).  : Fo42-311/2000E

Products include plants used as foods, medicines, and materials for handcrafts and technology. The Aboriginal culture included in this study are the Cree, Dene, and Métis people living in central to northern Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta, Canada... This ethnobotanical study attempts to do more than provide a list of useful plants. In addition to gathering botanical data, the original field research also gathered information on ritual uses of plants, the naming and classification of plants in the indigenous languages, beliefs regarding plants, and attitudes toward development of plant resources. The field work is supplemented by information gleaned from a literature review of the ethnobotany of various boreal forest cultures across North America, the nutritive value of the wild plants eaten, the medicinal value of the wild herbal medicines, and a preliminary assessment of ecological impact and economic potential of commercial development of these botanical resources.--Introduction

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Renseignements sur la publication
Ministère/Organisme Canada. Natural Resources Canada. Canadian Forest Service.
Titre Aboriginal plant use in Canada's northwest boreal forest / by Robin J. Marles et al. Published by UBC Press through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program (BPIDP).
Type de publication Monographie
Langue [Anglais]
Format Papier
Note(s) "Products include plants used as foods, medicines, and materials for handcrafts and technology. The Aboriginal culture included in this study are the Cree, Dene, and Métis people living in central to northern Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta, Canada... This ethnobotanical study attempts to do more than provide a list of useful plants. In addition to gathering botanical data, the original field research also gathered information on ritual uses of plants, the naming and classification of plants in the indigenous languages, beliefs regarding plants, and attitudes toward development of plant resources. The field work is supplemented by information gleaned from a literature review of the ethnobotany of various boreal forest cultures across North America, the nutritive value of the wild plants eaten, the medicinal value of the wild herbal medicines, and a preliminary assessment of ecological impact and economic potential of commercial development of these botanical resources."--Introduction.
Information sur la publication Vancouver - British Columbia : Natural Resources Canada. 2000.
Reliure Softcover
Description viii, 368p. : coloured illus. ; 23 cm.
ISBN 0-7748-0738-5
Numéro de catalogue
  • Fo42-311/2000E
Descripteurs Plants
Forests
Aboriginal culture
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