Amanote Research

Amanote Research

    RegisterSign In

Living Lists: How the Indigenous Canela Come to Know Plants Through Ethnobotanical Classification

Journal of Ethnobiology - United States
doi 10.2993/0278-0771-36.1.105
Full Text
Open PDF
Abstract

Available in full text

Categories
AnthropologyAnimal SciencePlant ScienceZoology
Date

March 1, 2016

Authors
Theresa L. Miller
Publisher

Society of Ethnobiology


Related search

Cameroonian Medicinal Plants: A Bioactivity Versus Ethnobotanical Survey and Chemotaxonomic Classification

BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine
MedicineAlternative MedicineComplementary
2013English

Sharing What We Know About Living a Good Life: Indigenous Approaches to Knowledge Translation

Journal of the Canadian Health Libraries Association
MedicineLibraryInformation Sciences
2014English

How to Expect God’s Reign to Come: From Jesus’ Through the Ecclesial to the Cosmic Body

HTS Teologiese Studies / Theological Studies
Religious Studies
2016English

Do We Know How Plants Sense a Drying Soil?

Ciencia Rural
Animal ScienceZoologyAgronomyVeterinaryCrop Science
2004English

How We Come to Own Ourselves

Societas et Ius
2017English

The Protection of Indigenous Peoples’ Seed Rights During Ethnobotanical Research

Ethnobiology Letters
AnthropologyAgriculturalBiological Sciences
2018English

Speaking Stata: How to Face Lists With Fortitude

Stata Journal
Mathematics
2002English

“But I Know How to Google”

Cases on Learning Design and Human Performance Technology
2020English

Joint Know-How

Philosophical Studies
Philosophy
2018English

Amanote Research

Note-taking for researchers

Follow Amanote

© 2025 Amaplex Software S.P.R.L. All rights reserved.

Privacy PolicyRefund Policy