How Drugs Work

CONTENTS OF CURRICULUM UNIT 12.05.08

  1. Unit Guide
  1. Introduction
  2. Overview
  3. Rational
  4. Background
  5. Appendix-Content Standards
  6. Endnotes
  7. Annotated Bibliography

Medicines between Two Worlds

Jolene Rose Smith

Published September 2012

Tools for this Unit:

Annotated Bibliography

"Natural Resources Conservation Service." United States Department of Agriculture. plants.usda.gov (accessed July 2012) the website provides detail plant information.

Francis. Elmore H. Ethno-botany of the Navajo. University of New Mexico Press. No. 8. 1944

Nez. Alice. A fifth grade teacher and has experiential knowledge of herbs within the surrounding area of Kayenta.

Schwarz. Maureen Trudells. "Blood And Voice." Navajo Woman Ceremonial Practitioners. University of Arizona Press. 2003

Tree, Cecelia Luci. A local natural herbalist. She has practiced natural medicine since she was young girl. Her grandfather taught her which plants to use for aliments and sickness. She is 62 years old and have lived in Kayenta most of her life.

VanDyke. Dorthy Leake., John Benjamin, and Marcelotte Leake Roeder. "Desert and Mountain Plants of the Southwest." University of Oklahoma Press, Norman Publishing Division of the University. 1993

Wade. Davies. "Healing Ways." Navajo Health Care in the Twentieth Century. University of New Mexico Press. 2001

Wagman, M.D., Richard. "The New Complete Medical and Health Encyclopedia." Volume One and Four, J.G. Ferguson Publishing Company. 1989

Wyman. Leland Clifton. And Stuart K. Harris. "Navajo Indian Medical Ethno-botany." University of New Mexico bulletin, Anthropological series, v. 3, no. 5 whole no. 366. 1941

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