One River: Explorations and Discoveries in the Amazon Rain ForestSimon & Schuster, 1996 - 537 páginas In 1974-75, Wade Davis and Tim Plowman traveled the length of South America, living among a dozen Indian tribes, collecting medicinal plants and searching for the origins of coca, the sacred leaf of the Andes and the notorious source of cocaine. It was a journey inspired and made possible by their Harvard mentor, Richard Evans Schultes, the most important scientific explorer in South America in this century, whose exploits rival those of Darwin and the great naturalist explorers of the Victorian age. In 1941, after having identified ololiuqui, the long-lost Aztec hallucinogen, and having collected the first specimens of teonanacatl, the sacred mushroom of Mexico, Schultes took a leave of absence from Harvard and disappeared into the Northwest Amazon of Colombia. Twelve years later, he returned from South America, having gone places no outsider had ever been, mapping uncharted rivers and living among two dozen Indian tribes. He collected some twenty thousand botanical specimens, including three hundred species new to science, and documented the invaluable knowledge of native shamans. The world's leading authority on plant hallucinogens, Schultes was for his students a living link to a distant time when the tropical rain forests stood immense, inviolable, a mantle of green stretching across entire continents. It was a world greatly changed by the time Davis and Plowman began their journey, nearly thirty years later, and changed further today. |
Contenido
PREFACE | 11 |
MOUNTAINS OF THE ELDER BROTHER | 28 |
THE PEYOTE ROAD 1936 | 61 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Amazon Apaporis arrived asked Auca bark beneath Bogotá Botanical Museum Leaflets botanist canoe Caquetá coca cocaine collected Colombia color curare Cuzco dark drug east Ecuador expedition explorers feet field fire flowers forest gathered hallucinogenic hammock hand Harvard head headwaters Hevea hundred miles Inca Indians Iquitos jaguar Kamsá Kiowa knew Kofán land later latex leaves Leticia living looked lowlands Manaus Mayer Mazatec medicinal missionaries Mitú Mocoa months morning mountains mouth Murça mushrooms Nate Saint never night once Pacho Padre Pedro Peru peyote plantations plants poison priest Puerto Putumayo Rachel Saint rain reached Reko returned Richard Spruce Río Negro ritual river road rubber sacred Santa Schultes Schultes's seeds shaman Sibundoy Spaniards species specimens Spruce Sucumbíos teonanacatl thousand tion took town trail traveled trees tribe turned valley Vaupés walked Waorani week wild Witoto woman women yagé young