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Ilex cassine, the aboriginal North American tea / cover

Ilex cassine, the aboriginal North American tea /

Chapter 11: FOOTNOTES:
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About This Book

The bulletin examines a coastal holly species whose leaves and twigs were traditionally brewed by southeastern Indigenous peoples into a stimulant decoction used in ritual and social contexts. It summarizes botanical characteristics and geographic range, surveys historical and ethnographic accounts of preparation, ceremonial use, and cultural significance, and discusses chemical analyses indicating a caffeine-like alkaloid. Comparative notes relate this American beverage to tea and maté, and the author compiles prior references, distributional records, and botanical taxonomy while suggesting the plant's possible economic value and encouraging further investigation into related species and their constituents.

FOOTNOTES:

[1] This was written before Professor Venable’s recent investigations, hereafter referred to.
[2] Prof. W. Trelease, of the Shaw School of Botany, St. Louis, Mo., has written an excellent synopsis of the genus Ilex in the United States embracing 14 species.
[3] This was written before Professor Venable’s recent investigations, hereafter referred to.
[4] Vol. II, p. 39, “Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society.”
[5] Only when drunk in great quantity.—H.
[6] This is the Prinus glaber of Linnæus sp. pl. p. 471 and Cassena vera Floridanorum, Catesby’s Carolinas, 2 t. 57.