May 16, 2015

Endocrine: Chestnut Extract

Endocrine
Chestnut Extract
Summer 2015  Norman, Oklahoma

(Sorry for the construction but this post is being further developed. -KAPB)

The series intended on the endocrine system will also have photos of different probabilities in which the endocrine system cound be effected throu the use and misuse of obscure plants and habitats. Thanks.

Chestnut. There are several types of chestnuts in horticulture. This post will focus on the Chestnut tree.

It's in the developed stages of chestnut use that
the word 'chestnut' becomes a favorite to identify
themselves. It is for this reason that most theorists
believe those southern citizens were Europeans.
With the simple useage of chestnut extract,
Americans could have been physically altered
until they resembled something of a long term user...
thereby replacing the southern land owners
it would have been easy to repel...something to
look for in future conflicts.
During the early American colonization,  natural medicine was the only form of treatment known, very little was used, or known, of the modern pharmaceutical blends with minerals that is used today. It was either plants bodies, roots, blossoms, and seeds that were mixed with other plants, etc.

Chestnut tree bark, leaves, and roots were the favorite. When mixed with opium, popular in pre-civil war, the drug would carry through the blood stream much easier. Problem was, the mixture darkened the skin to a chestnut color.

(edit photo for inset)

The personage called 'Paula' that has been detailed through 'Plutonium' is a good example of a chestnut.

The girl in the photo here is also a Paula, or for Endoctine, a chestnut.