here's an amazing resource... it is the database of plants and their native american uses:
click on the picture for the link!
thought that it might be interesting to have a catalog of look-ups along with their results. let me start off with...
Search for hallucinogen found 30 matches: Acorus calamus L.
Calamus; Acoraceae
Cree, Alberta Drug (Hallucinogen)
Root chewed for the hallucinogenic effects.
Smith, G. Warren 1973 Arctic Pharmacognosia. Arctic 26:324-333 (p. 331)
Cardamine concatenata (Michx.) Sw.
Cutleaf Toothwort; Brassicaceae
Iroquois Drug (Hallucinogen)
Plant used to mesmerize.
Herrick, James William 1977 Iroquois Medical Botany. State University of New York, Albany, PhD Thesis (p. 339)
Clematis virginiana L.
Devil's Darning Needles; Ranunculaceae
Iroquois Drug (Hallucinogen)
Decoction of stems used as a wash to induce strange dreams.
Herrick, James William 1977 Iroquois Medical Botany. State University of New York, Albany, PhD Thesis (p. 330)
Cypripedium parviflorum var. pubescens (Willd.) Knight
Greater Yellow Lady's Slipper; Orchidaceae
Menominee Drug (Hallucinogen)
Plant used in sacred bundles to induce dreams of the supernatural.
Smith, Huron H. 1923 Ethnobotany of the Menomini Indians. Bulletin of the Public Museum of the City of Milwaukee 4:1-174 (p. 44)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Cahuilla Drug (Hallucinogen)
Most universally used hallucinogenic and medicinal plant known to man.
Bean, Lowell John and Katherine Siva Saubel 1972 Temalpakh (From the Earth); Cahuilla Indian Knowledge and Usage of Plants. Banning, CA. Malki Museum Press (p. 60)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Cahuilla Drug (Hallucinogen)
Used by the shaman to transcend reality and enter other worlds.
Bean, Lowell John and Katherine Siva Saubel 1972 Temalpakh (From the Earth); Cahuilla Indian Knowledge and Usage of Plants. Banning, CA. Malki Museum Press (p. 60)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Chumash Drug (Hallucinogen)
Most universally used hallucinogenic and medicinal plant known to man.
Bean, Lowell John and Katherine Siva Saubel 1972 Temalpakh (From the Earth); Cahuilla Indian Knowledge and Usage of Plants. Banning, CA. Malki Museum Press (p. 60)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Coahuilla Drug (Hallucinogen)
Plant used as a "delirient," but with extreme danger, as it can cause death.
Barrows, David Prescott 1967 The Ethno-Botany of the Coahuilla Indians of Southern California. Banning CA. Malki Museum Press. Originally Published 1900 (p. 80)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Costanoan Drug (Hallucinogen)
Dried leaves smoked as a hallucinogen.
Bocek, Barbara R. 1984 Ethnobotany of Costanoan Indians, California, Based on Collections by John P. Harrington. Economic Botany 38(2):240-255 (p. 14)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Diegueno Drug (Hallucinogen)
Most universally used hallucinogenic and medicinal plant known to man.
Bean, Lowell John and Katherine Siva Saubel 1972 Temalpakh (From the Earth); Cahuilla Indian Knowledge and Usage of Plants. Banning, CA. Malki Museum Press (p. 60)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Diegueno Drug (Hallucinogen)
Well known as a hallucinogenic plant used in rites marking boys' initiation into the toloache cult.
Hedges, Ken 1986 Santa Ysabel Ethnobotany. San Diego Museum of Man Ethnic Technology Notes, No. 20 (p. 17)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Gabrielino Drug (Hallucinogen)
Most universally used hallucinogenic and medicinal plant known to man.
Bean, Lowell John and Katherine Siva Saubel 1972 Temalpakh (From the Earth); Cahuilla Indian Knowledge and Usage of Plants. Banning, CA. Malki Museum Press (p. 60)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Hopi Drug (Hallucinogen)
Root chewed to induce visions by medicine man while making a diagnosis.
Colton, Harold S. 1974 Hopi History And Ethnobotany. IN D. A. Horr (ed.) Hopi Indians. Garland: New York. (p. 306)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Hopi Drug (Hallucinogen)
Roots chewed by doctor to induce visions while making diagnosis.
Whiting, Alfred F. 1939 Ethnobotany of the Hopi. Museum of Northern Arizona Bulletin #15 (p. 31, 89)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Kawaiisu Drug (Hallucinogen)
Plant used as a hallucinogen to induce dreams and visions.
Zigmond, Maurice L. 1981 Kawaiisu Ethnobotany. Salt Lake City. University of Utah Press (p. 23)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Luiseno Drug (Hallucinogen)
Most universally used hallucinogenic and medicinal plant known to man.
Bean, Lowell John and Katherine Siva Saubel 1972 Temalpakh (From the Earth); Cahuilla Indian Knowledge and Usage of Plants. Banning, CA. Malki Museum Press (p. 60)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Miwok Drug (Hallucinogen)
Root eaten to induce delirium which achieved supernatural power.
Barrett, S. A. and E. W. Gifford 1933 Miwok Material Culture. Bulletin of the Public Museum of the City of Milwaukee 2(4):11 (p. 169)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Miwok Drug (Hallucinogen)
Decoction of plant taken to induce delirium which achieved supernatural power.
Barrett, S. A. and E. W. Gifford 1933 Miwok Material Culture. Bulletin of the Public Museum of the City of Milwaukee 2(4):11 (p. 169)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Navajo, Ramah Drug (Hallucinogen)
Plant caused hallucinations and made "you drunk like from whisky."
Vestal, Paul A. 1952 The Ethnobotany of the Ramah Navaho. Papers of the Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology 40(4):1-94 (p. 42)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Paiute Drug (Hallucinogen)
Decoction of ground, soaked roots taken to have visions, especially visitations from the dead.
Steward, Julian H. 1933 Ethnography of the Owens Valley Paiute. University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology 33(3):233-250 (p. 31
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Paiute Drug (Hallucinogen)
Seeds eaten to see dead relatives.
Steward, Julian H. 1933 Ethnography of the Owens Valley Paiute. University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology 33(3):233-250 (p. 31
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Paiute, Northern Drug (Hallucinogen)
Roots eaten to discover things or see things that could not be seen with ordinary powers.
Fowler, Catherine S. 1989 Willards Z. Park's Ethnographic Notes on the Northern Paiute of Western Nevada 1933-1940. Salt Lake City. University of Utah Press (p. 126)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Shoshoni Drug (Hallucinogen)
Decoction of root taken to become unconscious and have visions.
Murphey, Edith Van Allen 1990 Indian Uses of Native Plants. Glenwood, Ill. Meyerbooks. Originally published in 1959 (p. 50)
Ilex vomitoria Ait.
Yaupon; Aquifoliaceae
Cherokee Drug (Hallucinogen)
Used to "evoke ecstasies."
Hamel, Paul B. and Mary U. Chiltoskey 1975 Cherokee Plants and Their Uses -- A 400 Year History. Sylva, N.C. Herald Publishing Co. (p. 12, 62)
Lophophora williamsii (Lem. ex Salm-Dyck) Coult.
Peyote; Cactaceae
Ponca Drug (Hallucinogen)
Dried flesh "buttons" eaten to cause auditory and visual hallucinations.
Howard, James 1965 The Ponca Tribe. SI-BAE Bulletin #195 (p. 4
Magnolia virginiana L.
Laurel; Magnoliaceae
Rappahannock Drug (Hallucinogen)
Leaves or bark placed in cupped hands, over nose and inhaled as "mild dope."
Speck, Frank G., R.B. Hassrick and E.S. Carpenter 1942 Rappahannock Herbals, Folk-Lore and Science of Cures. Proceedings of the Delaware County Institute of Science 10:7-55. (p. 2
Mirabilis multiflora (Torr.) Gray
Colorado Four O'clock; Nyctaginaceae
Hopi Drug (Hallucinogen)
Root chewed by medicine man to induce visions while making a diagnosis.
Colton, Harold S. 1974 Hopi History And Ethnobotany. IN D. A. Horr (ed.) Hopi Indians. Garland: New York. (p. 334)
Mirabilis multiflora var. multiflora
Colorado Four O'clock; Nyctaginaceae
Hopi Drug (Hallucinogen)
Roots chewed by doctor to induce visions while making diagnosis.
Whiting, Alfred F. 1939 Ethnobotany of the Hopi. Museum of Northern Arizona Bulletin #15 (p. 31, 75)
Nicotiana quadrivalvis var. bigelovii (Torr.) DeWolf
Bigelow's Tobacco; Solanaceae
Kawaiisu Drug (Hallucinogen)
Plant eaten to cause dreams.
Zigmond, Maurice L. 1981 Kawaiisu Ethnobotany. Salt Lake City. University of Utah Press (p. 43)
Thamnosma montana Torr. & Fr�m.
Turpentinebroom; Rutaceae
Kawaiisu Drug (Hallucinogen)
Infusion of plant taken by medicine men "to go crazy like coyotes."
Zigmond, Maurice L. 1981 Kawaiisu Ethnobotany. Salt Lake City. University of Utah Press (p. 67)
enjoy...
click on the picture for the link!
thought that it might be interesting to have a catalog of look-ups along with their results. let me start off with...
Search for hallucinogen found 30 matches: Acorus calamus L.
Calamus; Acoraceae
Cree, Alberta Drug (Hallucinogen)
Root chewed for the hallucinogenic effects.
Smith, G. Warren 1973 Arctic Pharmacognosia. Arctic 26:324-333 (p. 331)
Cardamine concatenata (Michx.) Sw.
Cutleaf Toothwort; Brassicaceae
Iroquois Drug (Hallucinogen)
Plant used to mesmerize.
Herrick, James William 1977 Iroquois Medical Botany. State University of New York, Albany, PhD Thesis (p. 339)
Clematis virginiana L.
Devil's Darning Needles; Ranunculaceae
Iroquois Drug (Hallucinogen)
Decoction of stems used as a wash to induce strange dreams.
Herrick, James William 1977 Iroquois Medical Botany. State University of New York, Albany, PhD Thesis (p. 330)
Cypripedium parviflorum var. pubescens (Willd.) Knight
Greater Yellow Lady's Slipper; Orchidaceae
Menominee Drug (Hallucinogen)
Plant used in sacred bundles to induce dreams of the supernatural.
Smith, Huron H. 1923 Ethnobotany of the Menomini Indians. Bulletin of the Public Museum of the City of Milwaukee 4:1-174 (p. 44)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Cahuilla Drug (Hallucinogen)
Most universally used hallucinogenic and medicinal plant known to man.
Bean, Lowell John and Katherine Siva Saubel 1972 Temalpakh (From the Earth); Cahuilla Indian Knowledge and Usage of Plants. Banning, CA. Malki Museum Press (p. 60)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Cahuilla Drug (Hallucinogen)
Used by the shaman to transcend reality and enter other worlds.
Bean, Lowell John and Katherine Siva Saubel 1972 Temalpakh (From the Earth); Cahuilla Indian Knowledge and Usage of Plants. Banning, CA. Malki Museum Press (p. 60)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Chumash Drug (Hallucinogen)
Most universally used hallucinogenic and medicinal plant known to man.
Bean, Lowell John and Katherine Siva Saubel 1972 Temalpakh (From the Earth); Cahuilla Indian Knowledge and Usage of Plants. Banning, CA. Malki Museum Press (p. 60)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Coahuilla Drug (Hallucinogen)
Plant used as a "delirient," but with extreme danger, as it can cause death.
Barrows, David Prescott 1967 The Ethno-Botany of the Coahuilla Indians of Southern California. Banning CA. Malki Museum Press. Originally Published 1900 (p. 80)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Costanoan Drug (Hallucinogen)
Dried leaves smoked as a hallucinogen.
Bocek, Barbara R. 1984 Ethnobotany of Costanoan Indians, California, Based on Collections by John P. Harrington. Economic Botany 38(2):240-255 (p. 14)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Diegueno Drug (Hallucinogen)
Most universally used hallucinogenic and medicinal plant known to man.
Bean, Lowell John and Katherine Siva Saubel 1972 Temalpakh (From the Earth); Cahuilla Indian Knowledge and Usage of Plants. Banning, CA. Malki Museum Press (p. 60)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Diegueno Drug (Hallucinogen)
Well known as a hallucinogenic plant used in rites marking boys' initiation into the toloache cult.
Hedges, Ken 1986 Santa Ysabel Ethnobotany. San Diego Museum of Man Ethnic Technology Notes, No. 20 (p. 17)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Gabrielino Drug (Hallucinogen)
Most universally used hallucinogenic and medicinal plant known to man.
Bean, Lowell John and Katherine Siva Saubel 1972 Temalpakh (From the Earth); Cahuilla Indian Knowledge and Usage of Plants. Banning, CA. Malki Museum Press (p. 60)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Hopi Drug (Hallucinogen)
Root chewed to induce visions by medicine man while making a diagnosis.
Colton, Harold S. 1974 Hopi History And Ethnobotany. IN D. A. Horr (ed.) Hopi Indians. Garland: New York. (p. 306)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Hopi Drug (Hallucinogen)
Roots chewed by doctor to induce visions while making diagnosis.
Whiting, Alfred F. 1939 Ethnobotany of the Hopi. Museum of Northern Arizona Bulletin #15 (p. 31, 89)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Kawaiisu Drug (Hallucinogen)
Plant used as a hallucinogen to induce dreams and visions.
Zigmond, Maurice L. 1981 Kawaiisu Ethnobotany. Salt Lake City. University of Utah Press (p. 23)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Luiseno Drug (Hallucinogen)
Most universally used hallucinogenic and medicinal plant known to man.
Bean, Lowell John and Katherine Siva Saubel 1972 Temalpakh (From the Earth); Cahuilla Indian Knowledge and Usage of Plants. Banning, CA. Malki Museum Press (p. 60)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Miwok Drug (Hallucinogen)
Root eaten to induce delirium which achieved supernatural power.
Barrett, S. A. and E. W. Gifford 1933 Miwok Material Culture. Bulletin of the Public Museum of the City of Milwaukee 2(4):11 (p. 169)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Miwok Drug (Hallucinogen)
Decoction of plant taken to induce delirium which achieved supernatural power.
Barrett, S. A. and E. W. Gifford 1933 Miwok Material Culture. Bulletin of the Public Museum of the City of Milwaukee 2(4):11 (p. 169)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Navajo, Ramah Drug (Hallucinogen)
Plant caused hallucinations and made "you drunk like from whisky."
Vestal, Paul A. 1952 The Ethnobotany of the Ramah Navaho. Papers of the Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology 40(4):1-94 (p. 42)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Paiute Drug (Hallucinogen)
Decoction of ground, soaked roots taken to have visions, especially visitations from the dead.
Steward, Julian H. 1933 Ethnography of the Owens Valley Paiute. University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology 33(3):233-250 (p. 31
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Paiute Drug (Hallucinogen)
Seeds eaten to see dead relatives.
Steward, Julian H. 1933 Ethnography of the Owens Valley Paiute. University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology 33(3):233-250 (p. 31
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Paiute, Northern Drug (Hallucinogen)
Roots eaten to discover things or see things that could not be seen with ordinary powers.
Fowler, Catherine S. 1989 Willards Z. Park's Ethnographic Notes on the Northern Paiute of Western Nevada 1933-1940. Salt Lake City. University of Utah Press (p. 126)
Datura wrightii Regel
Sacred Thornapple; Solanaceae
Shoshoni Drug (Hallucinogen)
Decoction of root taken to become unconscious and have visions.
Murphey, Edith Van Allen 1990 Indian Uses of Native Plants. Glenwood, Ill. Meyerbooks. Originally published in 1959 (p. 50)
Ilex vomitoria Ait.
Yaupon; Aquifoliaceae
Cherokee Drug (Hallucinogen)
Used to "evoke ecstasies."
Hamel, Paul B. and Mary U. Chiltoskey 1975 Cherokee Plants and Their Uses -- A 400 Year History. Sylva, N.C. Herald Publishing Co. (p. 12, 62)
Lophophora williamsii (Lem. ex Salm-Dyck) Coult.
Peyote; Cactaceae
Ponca Drug (Hallucinogen)
Dried flesh "buttons" eaten to cause auditory and visual hallucinations.
Howard, James 1965 The Ponca Tribe. SI-BAE Bulletin #195 (p. 4
Magnolia virginiana L.
Laurel; Magnoliaceae
Rappahannock Drug (Hallucinogen)
Leaves or bark placed in cupped hands, over nose and inhaled as "mild dope."
Speck, Frank G., R.B. Hassrick and E.S. Carpenter 1942 Rappahannock Herbals, Folk-Lore and Science of Cures. Proceedings of the Delaware County Institute of Science 10:7-55. (p. 2
Mirabilis multiflora (Torr.) Gray
Colorado Four O'clock; Nyctaginaceae
Hopi Drug (Hallucinogen)
Root chewed by medicine man to induce visions while making a diagnosis.
Colton, Harold S. 1974 Hopi History And Ethnobotany. IN D. A. Horr (ed.) Hopi Indians. Garland: New York. (p. 334)
Mirabilis multiflora var. multiflora
Colorado Four O'clock; Nyctaginaceae
Hopi Drug (Hallucinogen)
Roots chewed by doctor to induce visions while making diagnosis.
Whiting, Alfred F. 1939 Ethnobotany of the Hopi. Museum of Northern Arizona Bulletin #15 (p. 31, 75)
Nicotiana quadrivalvis var. bigelovii (Torr.) DeWolf
Bigelow's Tobacco; Solanaceae
Kawaiisu Drug (Hallucinogen)
Plant eaten to cause dreams.
Zigmond, Maurice L. 1981 Kawaiisu Ethnobotany. Salt Lake City. University of Utah Press (p. 43)
Thamnosma montana Torr. & Fr�m.
Turpentinebroom; Rutaceae
Kawaiisu Drug (Hallucinogen)
Infusion of plant taken by medicine men "to go crazy like coyotes."
Zigmond, Maurice L. 1981 Kawaiisu Ethnobotany. Salt Lake City. University of Utah Press (p. 67)
enjoy...