Details, Explanation and Meaning About Datura

Datura Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

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Datura is a genus of herb and shrub plants belonging to the Solanaceae. Originally from the American continent, different species now grow throughout the globe. Some of them are now classified under the name Brugmansia; commonly called Angel's trumpets , for the large (in some varieties up to 1 foot long) trumpet-shaped flowers.

All members of the family, under whichever name, contain the anticholinergic alkaloids hyoscyamine, scopolamine, and atropine. One annual species, Datura stramonium, or the thorn apple, so called for its spiked seed pods, was grown for its alkaloid content and used in medicine.

Datura was supposedly used in witchcraft to induce hallucinations. If one ingests the plant, one does not stop dreaming even when awake. Hallucinations caused by anticholinergics are extremely powerful in that they can create fully realistic three-dimensional objects that blend in perfectly with the person's view of the world.

Datura stramonium is also called jimsonweed. This name comes from the town of Jamestown, Virginia. British soldiers were accidentally served this unfamiliar native plant as food. They figured that if they boiled the plants, threw out the water, and reboiled them, that they would be safe to eat. The insurrection that they were sent to stop, the Whiskey Rebellion, is thought to have been more successful because so many were incapacitated for nearly a week. Datura wrightii, also called Sacred Datura or Western Jimsonweed, has similar effects.

The dose-response curve is very steep, so people who consume datura can easily get into the potentially dangerous zone. Datura is an anticholinergic, which may explain why the hallucinations are often called "daytime dreaming." In the 1990s and 2000s, the American media contained stories of teenagers and young adults dying or becoming seriously ill from intentionally ingesting Datura.

Table of contents
1 Species
2 External links
3 See also

Species

External links

See also

  • Henbane


Datura is also the name of a trance song by singer/songwriter Tori Amos. Appearing on her album To Venus and Back, the song features Amos reading a list of various plants that are growing in her garden over hypnotic piano and rhythms. She consistantly mentions Datura within the list, as if to indicate it is overgrowing and destroying her garden. The flower, in the song, is used as a metaphor for destructive relationships.


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