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National Geographic desk reference to nature's medicine  Cover Image Book Book

National Geographic desk reference to nature's medicine / Steven Foster and Rebecca L. Johnson. Johnson.

Foster, Steven, 1957- (Author). Johnson, Rebecca L. (Added Author).

Record details

  • ISBN: 0792236661 (hc)
  • Physical Description: 416 p. : col. ill., col. maps
  • Publisher: Washington : National Geographic Society, c2006.

Content descriptions

Bibliography, etc. Note:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Subject: Materia medica, Vegetable
Medicinal plants

  • Baker & Taylor
    An illustrated compendium of information on plants and their diverse therapeutic properties and benefits brings together folklore, scientific research, and medical theory to describe hundreds of plants, their origins and geographic distribution, cultivation, and medical applications.
  • Book News
    In this colorfully-illustrated guide to an "herbal renaissance," an herbalist (Foster) and a National Geographic author/avid gardener (Johnson) present a sampling of 150 healing plants used in Western phytomedicine. A (alfalfa)-Z (Zingiber officinale) descriptions summarize their distribution, traditional and current uses, toxicity, cultivation, preparation, and research. The volume includes nine essays on such plants by continent/country (e.g., Africa, North America, China, India); a glossary; and visual index. Some readers will need vision-enhancing bilberry to read the sole reference listed in each entry. Annotation ©2006 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
  • Grand Central Pub
    For millennia, humans have looked to nature for remedies to ailments great and small. Long before formal science enabled us to take a systematic approach to medicine, healers used plants to alleviate pain, ease the symptoms of dozens of diseases, and treat complaints of every kind. And today, countless people still use medicinal plants, whether in traditional roles or as building blocks for new research and innovative drugs. Featuring 350 full-color photographs, botanical drawings, and maps, this accessible, fact-filled book is based on the work of renowned botanical experts and presents alphabetically arranged, beautifully illustrated entries for hundreds of plants touted for millennia to soothe, even heal. Each is clearly described, with full details of its physical appearance and medicinal uses; its origins and geographic distribution, how it's harvested and used in conventional and alternative medicine, a range map; and more. It's also a fascinating medical chronicle filled with informative sidebars on everything from ancient folklore to the latest research. Readers learn how aspirin evolved from a concoction of willow bark to the familiar white pill of today, how the foxglove's flowery beauty contributes to the potent heart drug digitalis, and how many other now common treatments have deep historical and cultural roots. It's a journey that starts many centuries ago in remote places like the Amazon rain forest, where shamans practiced their powerful curative magic of plants, and leads to the high-tech pharmaceutical labs of today's scientists working to discover new plant-based drugs that can be used effectively to treat diseases major and minor alike, from cancer to the common cold.
  • Random House, Inc.
    For millennia, humans have looked to nature for remedies to ailments great and small. Long before formal science enabled us to take a systematic approach to medicine, healers used plants to alleviate pain, ease the symptoms of dozens of diseases, and treat complaints of every kind. And today, countless people still use medicinal plants, whether in traditional roles or as building blocks for new research and innovative drugs.


    Featuring 350 full-color photographs, botanical drawings, and maps, this accessible, fact-filled book is based on the work of renowned botanical experts and presents alphabetically arranged, beautifully illustrated entries for hundreds of plants touted for millennia to soothe, even heal. Each is clearly described, with full details of its physical appearance and medicinal uses; its origins and geographic distribution, how it's harvested and used in conventional and alternative medicine, a range map; and more.


    It's also a fascinating medical chronicle filled with informative sidebars on everything from ancient folklore to the latest research. Readers learn how aspirin evolved from a concoction of willow bark to the familiar white pill of today, how the foxglove's flowery beauty contributes to the potent heart drug digitalis, and how many other now common treatments have deep historical and cultural roots. It's a journey that starts many centuries ago in remote places like the Amazon rain forest, where shamans practiced their powerful curative magic of plants, and leads to the high-tech pharmaceutical labs of today's scientists working to discover new plant-based drugs that can be used effectively to treat diseases major and minor alike, from cancer to the common cold.

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