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Current use of holy mushrooms of the genus <i>Psilocybe</i> in a Zapotec community in Oaxaca, Mexico. [PDF]
Haro-Luna MX +4 more
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Identification of Hypoglycemic Glycolipids from Ipomoea murucoides by Affinity-Directed Fractionation, In Vitro, In Silico and Dynamic Light Scattering Analysis. [PDF]
Rosas-Ramírez D +5 more
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Phytochemical profile and biological activities of <i>Caesalpinia coriaria</i> extract: a review. [PDF]
Cipriano-Salazar M +5 more
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Abstract This chapter moves the focus from the national to the transnational context, to look at the uses of Nahuatl among members of the Mexican diaspora communities in the United States. The United States is home to many Indigenous Mexicans, who often continue to speak their Indigenous languages.
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2006
Culoptila nahuatl Flint Fig. 28 A–C Culoptila nahuatl Flint 1974a: 8. This species is similar to Culoptila aluca, C. azulae, and C. bidentata, agreeing in having a relatively short, subtruncate tergum X and an inflated phallobase with 2 prominent, curved spines. In C. nahuatl, however, the curved phallic spine, while enlarged basally, does not have the
Blahnik, Roger J., Holzenthal, Ralph W.
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Culoptila nahuatl Flint Fig. 28 A–C Culoptila nahuatl Flint 1974a: 8. This species is similar to Culoptila aluca, C. azulae, and C. bidentata, agreeing in having a relatively short, subtruncate tergum X and an inflated phallobase with 2 prominent, curved spines. In C. nahuatl, however, the curved phallic spine, while enlarged basally, does not have the
Blahnik, Roger J., Holzenthal, Ralph W.
openaire +1 more source

