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Echinacea purpurea—Modern herb collectors make no distinction between the species of “purple coneflowers” and put them all in the same gathering. The Choctaw chewed the roots to relieve coughing. (See p. 279.) Euthamia graminifolia—“Flat-top goldenrod” was used to treat chest pains and lower fever. The Ojibwa smoked the flowers as a hunting lure, saying that the odor simulated the smell of a deer’s hoof. (See p. 299.)
DOI link for Echinacea purpurea—Modern herb collectors make no distinction between the species of “purple coneflowers” and put them all in the same gathering. The Choctaw chewed the roots to relieve coughing. (See p. 279.) Euthamia graminifolia—“Flat-top goldenrod” was used to treat chest pains and lower fever. The Ojibwa smoked the flowers as a hunting lure, saying that the odor simulated the smell of a deer’s hoof. (See p. 299.)
Echinacea purpurea—Modern herb collectors make no distinction between the species of “purple coneflowers” and put them all in the same gathering. The Choctaw chewed the roots to relieve coughing. (See p. 279.) Euthamia graminifolia—“Flat-top goldenrod” was used to treat chest pains and lower fever. The Ojibwa smoked the flowers as a hunting lure, saying that the odor simulated the smell of a deer’s hoof. (See p. 299.)
ABSTRACT
Echinacea purpurea-Modern herb collectors make no distinction between the species of “purple coneflowers” and put them all in the same gathering. The Choctaw chewed the roots to relieve coughing. (See p. 279.)