DOI:10.1663/0013-0001(2003)057[0295:AEFTTO]2.0.CO;2 - Corpus ID: 30297486
Archaeological evidence for the tradition of psychoactive plant use In the old world
@article{The2003ArchaeologicalEF, title={Archaeological evidence for the tradition of psychoactive plant use In the old world}, author={IN The and Old World and Mark David Merlin}, journal={Economic Botany}, year={2003}, volume={57}, pages={295-323}, url={https://api.semanticscholar.org/CorpusID:30297486}}- IN TheOld WorldM. Merlin
- Published inEconomic Botany1 September 2003
- History
The hypothesis presented suggests that humans have a very ancient tra-dition involving the use of mind-altering agents in traditionalsocieties to produce profound, more or less spir-itual and cultural understanding.
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Key evidence of the use of psychotropic plants in ancient Greece is reviewed, finding that poppies, cannabis, and other plants such as henbane or datura were used for ritual and medicinal purposes.
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Key evidence of the use of psychotropic plants in ancient Greece is reviewed, finding that poppies, cannabis, and other plants such as henbane or datura were used for ritual and medicinal purposes.
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The earliest testimonies of the use of alcohol and drugs suggest that inebriation is a long-established habit, the origins of which can be traced back to prehistory. Traces highly suggestive of…
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On geographicecological and botanical and anthropological grounds, the Old World prima facie should hold more psychotropic plant species than the New-which is quite contrary to the apparent facts.
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