Catalogue of the collections in the Museum of the Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain / compiled by E.M. Holmes.
- Holmes E. M. (Edward Morell), 1843-1930.
- Date:
- 1878
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Catalogue of the collections in the Museum of the Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain / compiled by E.M. Holmes. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh. The original may be consulted at the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh.
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![13. Illicium anisatum, Loureiro. (Star Anise.) a. Fruit. For micr. section, vide Berg, Anat. Atlas, taf. 41. t. Essential Oil (Oleum Badiani.) 2^ote.—The essential oil resides in the pericarp only. It is distin- guished from that of aniseed by not congealing at 50^ P., but at 34° F. Pharmacographia, p. 20. For fig. of plant, see Bentley and Trimen, Med. Plants, tab. 10. 14 LiRIODENDRON TULIPIITERA, I/. (Tulip Tree.) a. Bark. Note.—Official in the secondary list of the United States Pharma- copoeia. It is a stimulant, tonic, and, diaphoretic. It is apt to deteriorate by keeping. Wood and Bache, Dispens., p. 517. 15. Magnolia glauca, L. (Swamp Sassafras. Beaver Tree.) a. Bark. Note.—It possesses similar properties to those of Liriodendron, and also deteriorates by keeping. Wood and Bache, Dispens., p. 528. 16. Magnolia tripetala, L. (Umlrella Tree.) a. Fruit. Note.—The fruit is interesting on account of the very long stalk or funiculus by which the seed remains suspended for some time after the fruit has dehisced. Treas. Bat., p. 710. 17. Tasmannia aromatiga, _B. (Australian Pepper.) a. Fruit. Note.—Used in New Holland as a substitute for pepper. Treas. Bot., p. 1125. P. J. [1], vol. XV., p. 115. ANONACE^. 18. MoNODORA Myristica, Gaert. a. Fruit. Note.—The seeds are known as Jamaica, American, or Calabash nutmegs, and possess the properties and in some degree the flavour of nutmegs. Treas. Bot., p. 752. 19. Xtlopia ^thiopica, A. Bicli. (Habzelia.) a. Fruit. {Etliiopian Fepper.) h. Fruit, preserved -wei. Note.—Used by the natives of West Africa as an aromatic stimulant and also as an anthelmintic. P. J. [1], vol. xiv., p. 112. For figure, see Hist, des Drog., vol. iii., p. 736, 1869. 20. Xylopia glabra, L. (The Bitter Wood of the West Indies.) a. Wood. Note.—The wood possesses tonic properties. Treas. Bot., p. 1242, MBNISPERMACE^. 21. Abota rufbscens, Auhlet. (White Pareira Brava, Parreira Brava Grande, Ahutua.) a. Root and stem. h. Flat specimen of the root. Js'^oie.—This may be known from the genuine Pareira Brava by the](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21697358_0017.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)