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The Mayapple
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14649 |
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Section : |
NATURAL SCIENCE
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| Issue
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5 / 1988 |
716 Words |
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Georgia J. Persinos Georgia J. Persinos is a pharmacognosit interested in the
discovery of medicines from plants and other natural
resources. She is currently writing a book titled From Plants
to Modern Medicine--Methods of Discovery. |
In the spring, when flowers bloom and trees bud, the tendency is to look up at the colorful panorama. But in the woods, under the shade of trees, grows an unobtrusive plant that is attracting a good deal of scientific attention. Measuring only one foot tall, it bears one or two leaves, each up to 12 inches in diameter. It can be found growing north to Quebec, south to Georgia, and west to Texas and Minnesota. The solitary white flower appears in May or June, and the single yellowish fruit ripens in August or September. Amazingly, the immature fruit and green plant are poisonous, but the ripe fruit can be used to make jellies.
In 1753, this native American plant was given the name Podophyllum peltatum by Swedish botanist and physician Carl Linaeus. A member of the family Podophyllaceae, it is commonly known as mayapple, Indian apple, mandrake, wild lemon, and duck's foot.
The unobtrusive mayapple has a rich folklore. The Nepalese use the rhizomes and roots as a cathartic. The Cherokees of the mountains of North Carolina, who called it unikwetugi, which means "it wears a hat," used the root for deafness; as a vermifuge (to expel worms from the intestines); as a purgative (to evacuate the bowels quickly); and as an emetic (to induce vomiting). The Wyandots of Michigan and the Indians of the southern United States also found the roots useful as a cathartic. But the Penobscots of Maine were hundreds of years ahead of today's cancer researchers because they treated cancer using the underground parts of the plant.
By the mid-1880s, the resin podophyllin, prepared from an alcoholic extract of the rhizomes and roots, was so popular as a
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