Inhaling bowls – shallow vessels with two adjacent spouts – are artifacts found on many Caribbean islands. Early Amerindians probably used them to snort hallucinogens, liquid or powdered, through the nose. Now ponder this. Three inhaling bowls unearthed on the island of Carriacou, near Grenada in the Antilles, were made around 400 B.C., according to an analysis of radioactive isotopes conducted by Scott M. Fitzpatrick of North Carolina State University in Raleigh and several colleagues. Yet Carriacou was first settled 800 years later, around A.D. 400. Moreover, one of the bowls was found among archaeological deposits dating from about A.D. 1000. And the mineral content of the bowls indicates that they probably weren’t manufactured on Carriacou. So the bowls must have come from another island – one possibility is Puerto Rico, 465 miles away, where other bowls of similar antiquity have been discovered. And they must have been kept around for at least eight, if not 14 centuries. What could account for such endurance? The bowls were not buried in the manner of ritual offerings. Fitzpatrick thinks they were probably passed on from generation to generation as useful or treasured heirlooms. The findings were detailed in […]
Wednesday, December 24th, 2008
Ancient Family Heirlooms Used to Snort Hallucinogens
Author: STEPHAN REEBS
Source: Natural History Magazine/LiveScience
Publication Date: 23 December 2008 12:04 pm ET
Link: Ancient Family Heirlooms Used to Snort Hallucinogens
Source: Natural History Magazine/LiveScience
Publication Date: 23 December 2008 12:04 pm ET
Link: Ancient Family Heirlooms Used to Snort Hallucinogens
Stephan: The desire to experience altered states of conscious has clearly always been a part of human society. That said it is obvious that criminalizing drug usage is an absurd position that has done us great damage as a country. Our focus should be managing it, and allowing existing laws governing behavior to define the parameters.
If someone comes up to you on the street and pokes you that is, and should be, illegal whether they are under the influence of some substance or straight.
We have two million people in prisons, and warehousing humans has become the basis of the economy of a number of small cities and towns in the U.S. This is a sign of social sickness, not health. Seventy per cent of those human beings are in jail for possessing a substance, many having committed no other crime. Like sex the problem essentially revolves around our unwillingness to acknowledge the truth about ourselves.
It is hypocrisy of the most toxic kind to develop policy known to be contradictory to good scientific data, and millennia of social history.