Poison Arrows: North American Indian Hunting and Warfare

Capa
University of Texas Press, 3 de jun. de 2009 - 143 páginas

A comprehensive survey of organic compounds used as poisons—on arrows and spears, in food, and even as insecticides—by numerous Native American tribes.

Biological warfare is a menacing twenty-first-century issue, but its origins extend to antiquity. While the recorded use of toxins in warfare in some ancient populations is rarely disputed (the use of arsenical smoke in China, which dates to at least 1000 BC, for example) the use of “poison arrows” and other deadly substances by Native American groups has been fraught with contradiction. At last revealing clear documentation to support these theories, anthropologist David Jones transforms the realm of ethnobotany in Poison Arrows.

Examining evidence within the few extant descriptive accounts of Native American warfare, along with grooved arrowheads and clues from botanical knowledge, Jones builds a solid case to indicate widespread and very effective use of many types of toxins. He argues that various groups applied them to not only warfare but also to hunting, and even as an early form of insect extermination. Culling extensive ethnological, historical, and archaeological data, Jones provides a thoroughly comprehensive survey of the use of ethnobotanical and entomological compounds applied in wide-ranging ways, including homicide and suicide. Although many narratives from the contact period in North America deny such uses, Jones now offers conclusive documentation to prove otherwise.

A groundbreaking study of a subject that has been long overlooked, Poison Arrows imparts an extraordinary new perspective to the history of warfare, weaponry, and deadly human ingenuity.

“A unique contribution to the field of American Indian ethnology. . . . This information has never been compiled before, and I doubt that many ethnologists in the field have ever suspected the extent to which poison was used among North American Indians. This book significantly extends our understanding.” —Wayne Van Horne, Associate Professor of Anthropology, Kennesaw State University

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Conteúdo

Chapter 1 On Plant Poisons
1
Chapter 2 Nonmilitary Poisons
6
Chapter 3 World Survey of Arrow Poisoning
20
Chapter 4 Arrow Poisons of the North American Indians
32
Chapter 5 Other Uses of Poisons in Warfare
49
Chapter 6 PaleoIndian Poison Use
53
Conclusion
62
Appendix Tribes and Poisons Used
69
Notes
75
Bibliography
93
Index
103
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Página 4 - Bacon ; and some of them eat plentifully of it, the effect of which was a very pleasant comedy ; for they turned natural fools upon it for several days : one would blow up a feather in the air ; another would dart straws at it with much fury ; and another stark naked was sitting up in a corner, like a monkey, grinning and making...
Página 24 - The Gorkhalese pretend, that it is one of their principal securities against invasion from the low countries ; and that they could so infect all the waters on the route by which an enemy was advancing, as to occasion his certain destruction.
Página 7 - In a dry summer season, they gather horse chestnuts, and different sorts of roots, which having pounded pretty fine, and steeped a while in a trough, they scatter this mixture over the surface of a middle-sized pond, and stir it about with poles, till the water is sufficiently impregnated with the intoxicating bittern. The fish are soon inebriated, and make to the surface of the water, with their bellies uppermost. The fishers gather them in baskets, and...
Página 4 - In this frantic condition they were confined, lest they should, in their folly, destroy themselves, — though it was observed that all their actions were full of innocence and good nature. Indeed, they were not very cleanly. A thousand such simple tricks they played, and after eleven days returned to themselves again, not remembering anything that had passed.
Página 8 - Porno chief, is substantially as follows: After the last June freshet, when the river was running very low, all of the inhabitants of a village or of several neighboring rancherias would assemble together at some convenient place on the river. The squaws were each provided with a quantity of the fleshy bulbs, which they deposited in a common heap and proceeded to mash up on the rocks. A weir...
Página 24 - This dreadful root, of which large quantities are annually imported, is equally fatal when taken into the stomach or applied to wounds, and is in universal use for poisoning arrows ; and, there is too much reason to suspect, for the worst of purposes'.

Sobre o autor (2009)

DAVID E. JONES is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Central Florida in Orlando.

Informações bibliográficas