naeb
Data source: Native American Ethnobotany Database · About: NAEB
id | species | tribe | source | pageno | use_category | use_subcategory | notes | rawsource |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
33470 | 3368 | 21 | 53 | 206 | 3 | 79 | 'Canes' hollowed out and used for pipe stems. | Turner, Nancy J., 1973, The Ethnobotany of the Bella Coola Indians of British Columbia, Syesis 6:193-220, page 206 |
3531 | 265 | 67 | 152 | 37 | 3 | 79 | Dried hollow stems formerly used as pipe stems. | Ager, Thomas A. and Lynn Price Ager, 1980, Ethnobotany of The Eskimos of Nelson Island, Alaska, Arctic Anthropology 27:26-48, page 37 |
16634 | 1821 | 257 | 61 | 56 | 3 | 79 | Dried stalks made into fire-sticks and used to light cigarettes. | Robbins, W.W., J.P. Harrington and B. Freire-Marreco, 1916, Ethnobotany of the Tewa Indians, SI-BAE Bulletin #55, page 56 |
14049 | 1512 | 284 | 48 | 263 | 3 | 79 | Dried stem used as tobacco pipe if pottery pipe lacking, burned with tobacco. | Gifford, E. W., 1936, Northeastern and Western Yavapai, University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology 34:247-345, page 263 |
26602 | 2901 | 151 | 73 | 17 | 3 | 79 | Hard, hollow culms used for pipe stems. | Blankinship, J. W., 1905, Native Economic Plants of Montana, Bozeman. Montana Agricultural College Experimental Station, Bulletin 56, page 17 |
21131 | 2261 | 58 | 47 | 43 | 3 | 79 | Hollow stem sections used as pipe stems for corn cob pipes and toy rose hip pipes. | Leighton, Anna L., 1985, Wild Plant Use by the Woods Cree (Nihithawak) of East-Central Saskatchewan, Ottawa. National Museums of Canada. Mercury Series, page 43 |
37540 | 3614 | 50 | 16 | 255 | 3 | 79 | Hollow stems made into pipes. | Bocek, Barbara R., 1984, Ethnobotany of Costanoan Indians, California, Based on Collections by John P. Harrington, Economic Botany 38(2):240-255, page 255 |
14093 | 1520 | 106 | 60 | 30 | 3 | 79 | Hollow stems used as pipes for smoking. | Zigmond, Maurice L., 1981, Kawaiisu Ethnobotany, Salt Lake City. University of Utah Press, page 30 |
14103 | 1522 | 106 | 60 | 30 | 3 | 79 | Hollow stems used as pipes for smoking. | Zigmond, Maurice L., 1981, Kawaiisu Ethnobotany, Salt Lake City. University of Utah Press, page 30 |
21142 | 2263 | 202 | 40 | 56 | 3 | 79 | Hollow stems used for pipe stems. | Goodrich, Jennie and Claudia Lawson, 1980, Kashaya Pomo Plants, Los Angeles. American Indian Studies Center, University of California, Los Angeles, page 56 |
36508 | 3565 | 50 | 16 | 254 | 3 | 79 | Hollow twigs used for pipes. | Bocek, Barbara R., 1984, Ethnobotany of Costanoan Indians, California, Based on Collections by John P. Harrington, Economic Botany 38(2):240-255, page 254 |
21143 | 2264 | 106 | 60 | 38 | 3 | 79 | Hollowed stem section used as a cigarette type pipe. | Zigmond, Maurice L., 1981, Kawaiisu Ethnobotany, Salt Lake City. University of Utah Press, page 38 |
557 | 27 | 151 | 30 | 4 | 3 | 79 | Large trunk burls or knots used to make pipe stems. | Hart, Jeff, 1992, Montana Native Plants and Early Peoples, Helena. Montana Historical Society Press, page 4 |
32307 | 3274 | 48 | 147 | 524 | 3 | 79 | Leaves used as cigarette wrappers. | Carlson, Gustav G. and Volney H. Jones, 1940, Some Notes on Uses of Plants by the Comanche Indians, Papers of the Michigan Academy of Science, Arts and Letters 25:517-542, page 524 |
38168 | 3707 | 48 | 147 | 524 | 3 | 79 | Leaves used as cigarette wrappers. | Carlson, Gustav G. and Volney H. Jones, 1940, Some Notes on Uses of Plants by the Comanche Indians, Papers of the Michigan Academy of Science, Arts and Letters 25:517-542, page 524 |
28061 | 2968 | 259 | 10 | 104 | 3 | 79 | Plant tops hollowed out with mock orange sticks and used to make the stems of smoking pipes. | Turner, Nancy J., Laurence C. Thompson and M. Terry Thompson et al., 1990, Thompson Ethnobotany: Knowledge and Usage of Plants by the Thompson Indians of British Columbia, Victoria. Royal British Columbia Museum, page 104 |
21585 | 2335 | 228 | 88 | 466 | 3 | 79 | Plant used to make pipe bowls. | Sturtevant, William, 1954, The Mikasuki Seminole: Medical Beliefs and Practices, Yale University, PhD Thesis, page 466 |
26570 | 2901 | 15 | 45 | 159 | 3 | 79 | Reeds used to make pipe stems. | Reagan, Albert B., 1929, Plants Used by the White Mountain Apache Indians of Arizona, Wisconsin Archeologist 8:143-61., page 159 |
8968 | 843 | 25 | 111 | 62 | 3 | 79 | Root used to make pipe bowls. | Murphey, Edith Van Allen, 1990, Indian Uses of Native Plants, Glenwood, Ill. Meyerbooks. Originally published in 1959, page 62 |
34973 | 3470 | 92 | 41 | 74 | 3 | 79 | Roots used to make pipe bowls. | Turner, Nancy J. and Barbara S. Efrat, 1982, Ethnobotany of the Hesquiat Indians of Vancouver Island, Victoria. British Columbia Provincial Museum, page 74 |
26615 | 2901 | 188 | 27 | 27 | 3 | 79 | Six inch stems used as smoking tubes. | Castetter, Edward F. and Ruth M. Underhill, 1935, Ethnobiological Studies in the American Southwest II. The Ethnobiology of the Papago Indians, University of New Mexico Bulletin 4(3):1-84, page 27 |
37134 | 3586 | 33 | 57 | 17 | 3 | 79 | Small sticks wrapped with buffalo hair and used as a tamper for tobacco pipes. | Hart, Jeffrey A., 1981, The Ethnobotany of the Northern Cheyenne Indians of Montana, Journal of Ethnopharmacology 4:1-55, page 17 |
12069 | 1237 | 12 | 52 | 41 | 3 | 79 | Stalks and leaf base tissues used to make cigarette papers. | Basehart, Harry W., 1974, Apache Indians XII. Mescalero Apache Subsistence Patterns and Socio-Political Organization, New York. Garland Publishing Inc., page 41 |
36779 | 3567 | 21 | 53 | 203 | 3 | 79 | Stems hollowed out and used as pipe bowls. | Turner, Nancy J., 1973, The Ethnobotany of the Bella Coola Indians of British Columbia, Syesis 6:193-220, page 203 |
14050 | 1513 | 106 | 60 | 30 | 3 | 79 | Stems used as a substitute for 'cane' as a pipe. | Zigmond, Maurice L., 1981, Kawaiisu Ethnobotany, Salt Lake City. University of Utah Press, page 30 |
21140 | 2262 | 200 | 80 | 15 | 3 | 79 | Stems used for clay elbow pipes. | Gifford, E. W., 1967, Ethnographic Notes on the Southwestern Pomo, Anthropological Records 25:10-15, page 15 |
34272 | 3436 | 115 | 66 | 99 | 3 | 79 | Stems used for pipe stems. | Coville, Frederick V., 1897, Notes On The Plants Used By The Klamath Indians Of Oregon., Contributions from the U.S. National Herbarium 5(2):87-110, page 99 |
11007 | 1102 | 23 | 26 | 111 | 3 | 79 | Stems used to make pipe stems and tamps. | Hellson, John C., 1974, Ethnobotany of the Blackfoot Indians, Ottawa. National Museums of Canada. Mercury Series, page 111 |
26578 | 2901 | 89 | 2 | 209 | 3 | 79 | Stems used to make pipe stems. | Weber, Steven A. and P. David Seaman, 1985, Havasupai Habitat: A. F. Whiting's Ethnography of a Traditional Indian Culture, Tucson. The University of Arizona Press, page 209 |
33591 | 3376 | 92 | 41 | 69 | 3 | 79 | Stems used to make pipe stems. | Turner, Nancy J. and Barbara S. Efrat, 1982, Ethnobotany of the Hesquiat Indians of Vancouver Island, Victoria. British Columbia Provincial Museum, page 69 |
39130 | 3853 | 233 | 92 | 61 | 3 | 79 | Stems used to make pipe stems. | Palmer, Gary, 1975, Shuswap Indian Ethnobotany, Syesis 8:29-51, page 61 |
4361 | 335 | 24 | 31 | 40 | 3 | 79 | Stems used to make pipes. | Bean, Lowell John and Katherine Siva Saubel, 1972, Temalpakh (From the Earth); Cahuilla Indian Knowledge and Usage of Plants, Banning, CA. Malki Museum Press, page 40 |
4379 | 336 | 24 | 31 | 40 | 3 | 79 | Stems used to make pipes. | Bean, Lowell John and Katherine Siva Saubel, 1972, Temalpakh (From the Earth); Cahuilla Indian Knowledge and Usage of Plants, Banning, CA. Malki Museum Press, page 40 |
4469 | 343 | 24 | 31 | 40 | 3 | 79 | Stems used to make pipes. | Bean, Lowell John and Katherine Siva Saubel, 1972, Temalpakh (From the Earth); Cahuilla Indian Knowledge and Usage of Plants, Banning, CA. Malki Museum Press, page 40 |
26589 | 2901 | 106 | 60 | 49 | 3 | 79 | Straight, rigid, hollow, bamboolike stems used in the making of pipes. | Zigmond, Maurice L., 1981, Kawaiisu Ethnobotany, Salt Lake City. University of Utah Press, page 49 |
26575 | 2901 | 44 | 125 | 122 | 3 | 79 | Tubular internodes used to smoke tobacco. | Castetter, Edward F. and Willis H. Bell, 1951, Yuman Indian Agriculture, Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, page 122 |
26598 | 2901 | 136 | 125 | 122 | 3 | 79 | Tubular internodes used to smoke tobacco. | Castetter, Edward F. and Willis H. Bell, 1951, Yuman Indian Agriculture, Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, page 122 |
26637 | 2901 | 288 | 125 | 122 | 3 | 79 | Tubular stalk internodes used to smoke tobacco. | Castetter, Edward F. and Willis H. Bell, 1951, Yuman Indian Agriculture, Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, page 122 |
128 | 3 | 257 | 61 | 38 | 3 | 79 | Twigs used for making pipe stems. | Robbins, W.W., J.P. Harrington and B. Freire-Marreco, 1916, Ethnobotany of the Tewa Indians, SI-BAE Bulletin #55, page 38 |
570 | 28 | 257 | 61 | 38 | 3 | 79 | Twigs used for making pipe stems. | Robbins, W.W., J.P. Harrington and B. Freire-Marreco, 1916, Ethnobotany of the Tewa Indians, SI-BAE Bulletin #55, page 38 |
35698 | 3521 | 106 | 60 | 61 | 3 | 79 | Twigs with leaves used as 'wrappers' to hold tobacco. | Zigmond, Maurice L., 1981, Kawaiisu Ethnobotany, Salt Lake City. University of Utah Press, page 61 |
35803 | 3527 | 106 | 60 | 61 | 3 | 79 | Twigs with leaves used as 'wrappers' to hold tobacco. | Zigmond, Maurice L., 1981, Kawaiisu Ethnobotany, Salt Lake City. University of Utah Press, page 61 |
26377 | 2875 | 105 | 71 | 384 | 3 | 79 | Twigs, with the pithy center removed, used to make tobacco pipes. | Schenck, Sara M. and E. W. Gifford, 1952, Karok Ethnobotany, Anthropological Records 13(6):377-392, page 384 |
7645 | 660 | 125 | 108 | 29 | 3 | 79 | Used for pipe cleaning. | Rogers, Dilwyn J, 1980, Lakota Names and Traditional Uses of Native Plants by Sicangu (Brule) People in the Rosebud Area, South Dakota, St. Francis, SD. Rosebud Educational Scoiety, page 29 |
15235 | 1658 | 287 | 89 | 378 | 3 | 79 | Used to make tobacco pipes. | Chestnut, V. K., 1902, Plants Used by the Indians of Mendocino County, California, Contributions from the U.S. National Herbarium 7:295-408., page 378 |
8976 | 843 | 106 | 60 | 18 | 3 | 79 | Wood carved into a pipe head and used with a hollowed section of a honeysuckle twig as a pipe stem. | Zigmond, Maurice L., 1981, Kawaiisu Ethnobotany, Salt Lake City. University of Utah Press, page 18 |
36529 | 3565 | 106 | 60 | 62 | 3 | 79 | Wood section hollowed out and used as a tobacco container. | Zigmond, Maurice L., 1981, Kawaiisu Ethnobotany, Salt Lake City. University of Utah Press, page 62 |
15277 | 1660 | 33 | 57 | 31 | 3 | 79 | Wood used to make pipe stems. | Hart, Jeffrey A., 1981, The Ethnobotany of the Northern Cheyenne Indians of Montana, Journal of Ethnopharmacology 4:1-55, page 31 |
15280 | 1660 | 61 | 17 | 108 | 3 | 79 | Wood used to make pipe stems. | Gilmore, Melvin R., 1919, Uses of Plants by the Indians of the Missouri River Region, SI-BAE Annual Report #33, page 108 |
15288 | 1660 | 125 | 108 | 52 | 3 | 79 | Wood used to make pipe stems. | Rogers, Dilwyn J, 1980, Lakota Names and Traditional Uses of Native Plants by Sicangu (Brule) People in the Rosebud Area, South Dakota, St. Francis, SD. Rosebud Educational Scoiety, page 52 |
15300 | 1660 | 177 | 17 | 108 | 3 | 79 | Wood used to make pipe stems. | Gilmore, Melvin R., 1919, Uses of Plants by the Indians of the Missouri River Region, SI-BAE Annual Report #33, page 108 |
15303 | 1660 | 190 | 17 | 108 | 3 | 79 | Wood used to make pipe stems. | Gilmore, Melvin R., 1919, Uses of Plants by the Indians of the Missouri River Region, SI-BAE Annual Report #33, page 108 |
15308 | 1660 | 205 | 17 | 108 | 3 | 79 | Wood used to make pipe stems. | Gilmore, Melvin R., 1919, Uses of Plants by the Indians of the Missouri River Region, SI-BAE Annual Report #33, page 108 |
15315 | 1660 | 280 | 17 | 108 | 3 | 79 | Wood used to make pipe stems. | Gilmore, Melvin R., 1919, Uses of Plants by the Indians of the Missouri River Region, SI-BAE Annual Report #33, page 108 |
25222 | 2713 | 32 | 1 | 56 | 3 | 79 | Wood used to make pipe stems. | Hamel, Paul B. and Mary U. Chiltoskey, 1975, Cherokee Plants and Their Uses -- A 400 Year History, Sylva, N.C. Herald Publishing Co., page 56 |
26391 | 2875 | 175 | 32 | 108 | 3 | 79 | Wood used to make pipe stems. | Turner, Nancy J., R. Bouchard and Dorothy I.D. Kennedy, 1980, Ethnobotany of the Okanagan-Colville Indians of British Columbia and Washington, Victoria. British Columbia Provincial Museum, page 108 |
30686 | 3178 | 134 | 78 | 6 | 3 | 79 | Wood used to make pipes. | Speck, Frank G. and R.W. Dexter, 1952, Utilization of Animals and Plants by the Malecite Indians of New Brunswick, Journal of the Washington Academy of Sciences 42:1-7, page 6 |
32866 | 3340 | 32 | 1 | 52 | 3 | 79 | Wood used to make pipes. | Hamel, Paul B. and Mary U. Chiltoskey, 1975, Cherokee Plants and Their Uses -- A 400 Year History, Sylva, N.C. Herald Publishing Co., page 52 |
39566 | 3902 | 266 | 70 | 57 | 3 | 79 | Wood used to make pipes. | Baker, Marc A., 1981, The Ethnobotany of the Yurok, Tolowa and Karok Indians of Northwest California, Humboldt State University, M.A. Thesis, page 57 |
15236 | 1658 | 287 | 69 | 93 | 3 | 79 | Wood used to make straight pipes. | Curtin, L. S. M., 1957, Some Plants Used by the Yuki Indians ... II. Food Plants, The Masterkey 31:85-94, page 93 |
39487 | 3902 | 105 | 71 | 379 | 3 | 79 | Wood used to make tobacco pipes. | Schenck, Sara M. and E. W. Gifford, 1952, Karok Ethnobotany, Anthropological Records 13(6):377-392, page 379 |