article

The ethnobotany of the Island Caribs of Dominica

Webbia12 • Published In 1957 • Pages: 513-644

By: Hodge, Walter H., Taylor, Douglas MacRae.

Abstract
This is an invaluable addition to the relatively scarce information on the Island Caribs, being a careful analysis of cultural usage and a description and a description of most of the plants employed by the Dominican Indians. The authors first present an introduction to the history and culture of the Caribs, followed by an explanation of their materials and methods of research. The body of the work is a catalog of known plants of both native and foreign origin which were or are of economic value to the Caribs. Each plant is listed according to family, genus and species, with botanical, Creole, English, and Carib names, described and placed in the Dominican geography, accounted for in terms of usage by the Dominicans and others, and cited by number in botanical collections. Data on the uses of the plants by other groups is given when available. An enumeration of plants by use and four indices of the names by languages enhance the worth of this source.
Subjects
Flora
Ethnobotany
culture
Island Carib
HRAF PubDate
2005
Region
Middle America and the Caribbean
Sub Region
Caribbean
Document Type
article
Evaluation
Creator Types
Botanist
Ethnologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
George R. Bedell ; 1959
Field Date
1930-1956
Coverage Date
1930-1956
Coverage Place
Dominica
Notes
W. H. Hodge and Douglas Taylor
Includes bibliographical references (p. 624-627)
LCCN
08030693
LCSH
Black Carib Indians