Talk:Amanita muscaria
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To-do list for Amanita muscaria: (carried over)
Ethnobotanist and ethnomycologist Giorgio Samorini has proposed a symbiotic relationship between toads, flies and the fly agaric. After a lick of A. muscaria, flies become inebriated and delirious prey for hungry toads that may have learned this, therefore hanging out around toadstools. This relationship within nature illuminates an etymological keystone and example of zoopharmacognosy. This would also provide further biosemiotic insight into the ancient mystery of toads, flies and mushrooms appearing together in popular mythology and fairy lore.[1]
It is less often also thought to be the amrita talked about in Buddhist scriptures.[2]
Ott also speculates about Santa's bag of toys. According to historians, ancient Siberia was one of the first civilizations to use fly agaric in practice.[citation needed] The Siberian hut, or yurt, is equipped with a smokehole at the top. Ott suggests that a shaman entered the yurt through the smokehole with a sack of mushrooms in his hand, to be placed in stockings over the fireplace where they could be dried for celebratory use.
It is classified as an unscheduled drug in the United States.[citation needed] Most other countries, such as those of the European Union, do not have laws against the use of A. muscaria.[3]
Kobayashi Issa, Japanese Haiku (1763-1827)[4] When A. muscaria jumps to native species It can then be exported with its new symbiont (for example, from Australia to Argentina).
The woodpecker of Mars is another unusual folk name.[5]
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“Processed through reindeer”
[edit]“Patrick Harding describes the Sami custom of processing the fly agaric through reindeer.”
what does this mean?
This is completely out of the blue and makes no sense to me.. 50.125.83.68 (talk) 05:25, 25 October 2024 (UTC)
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