Umbilicaria mammulata -(Ach.) Tuck.-
lichen, tripe du roche


Entry Type: Fungi

Species Name: Umbilicaria mammulata -(Ach.) Tuck.-

Common Name: lichen, tripe du roche

Myaamia Name: nipoopi minosakayi

Description:

Harvest Seasons: Undetermined

Harvest Comments:

Habitats: Undetermined

Sources

Blair, E 1911

Reference Type: Use - Food

Archival Data:

Umbilicaria dillenii, called "tripe de roche" by Perrot, was eaten by the Algonquians that do not cultivate the ground, but are nomadic. "They consider themselves very fortunate in their hunting expeditions when they encounter some rabbits, martens, or partridges, from which to make a soup, and without what we call tripe de roche--which you would say is a species of gray moss, dry, and resembling oublies [wafers used to stick papers together], and which of itself has only an earthy taste, and the flavor of the soup in which it is cooked--most of their families would perish of hunger".

Comments: N/A


Dunn, J.P. 1919

Reference Type: Use - Food

Archival Data:

"It is used for food only as a last resort, and Father Andre well says of it: "It is necessary to close one's eyes when one begins to eat it".

Comments: N/A

Consortia of North American Lichen Herbaria

Reference Type: Habitat

Archival Data :

A lichen, which is a fungus with algal symbionts. Occurs on rocky substrates in eastern Myaamia lands.

Comments: N/A

Kenton, E. 1925

Reference Type: Related Info

Archival Data:

A flat-'leafed' lichen was eaten by the Ottawas. "When hunger is added to these discomforts [excessive heat and cold], it is a severe hardship, but one that soon teaches a man to find a relish in the bitterest roots and the most putrid meat. We were forced to accustom ourselves to eat a certain moss growing upon the rocks. It is a sort of shell-shaped leaf which is always covered with catepillars and spiders, and which, on being boiled, furnishes an insipid soup, black and viscous, that rather serves to ward off death than to impart life".

Comments: N/A


Kellogg, L.P. 1923

Reference Type: Related Info

Archival Data:

Trippe de Roches also mentioned as a food source by Charlevoix, referring to wandering Indians of the midwest that do not cultivate the ground.

Comments: N/A


Gatschet, A.S. ca. 1895

Reference Type: Related Info

Archival Data:

nipopi minosakayi

Comments: N/A


Dunn, J.P. ca. 1900

Reference Type: Related Info

Archival Data:

minosakai

Comments: N/A

Legends

  • L.: L. stands for Carl Linneaus, a Swedish botanist and zoologist living from 1707 - 1778, who formed the binomial nomenclature system for scientific naming of species (the two part name). His initial after a scientific name indicates he was the authority for that species name.
  • sp.: Indicates the actual species name cannot or need not be specified. Example: Lilium sp. indicates a single species in the genus Lilium that is not known or does not need to be specified.
  • spp.: (plural) indicates "several species", two or more species of the given genus. Example: Lilium spp. indicates 2 or more species in the genus that cannot or do not need to be distinguished.
  • Use - Unknown: A record for this plant exists but does not include explicit information about the plant's cultural use. It is probable the Myaamia used the plant.
  • Botanical Sources: Sources of any botanical data for this plant species that is not related to its cultural use or significance.
  • Related Sources: Data indirectly related to Myaamia ethnobotany, including non-Myaamia uses of the plant in contemporary and historic times.
  • Myaamia Archival Sources: All records of plant use obtained directly from a Myaamia tribal member in an interview, recorded by a second party or by self-recording.
  • Undetermined (Plant Use): There exists use or other information about a certain, unknown plant species, but the specific species has not yet been determined.
  • Medicinal: For the purposes of this database, medicinal uses of plants and medicinal knowledge are defined as: Commonly held communal knowledge regarding the use of plant-based substances that aid in maintaining a healthy mind, body or spirit, including tonics and teas.
  • Technology: For the purposes of this database, technological uses of plants are defined as: Plants used in the making of food processing, canoes, rafts, dyes, tools, utensils, weapons, hunting and fishing gear (i.e. net, weir, etc.), cordage, string, rope, fodder plant species, firewood, any plants used in trade, etc.
  • Material: For the purposes of this database, material uses of plants are defined as: Plants used in construction of dwellings (floor mats, roofing, side walls), furniture, baskets, storage items, musical instruments, games, crafts, jewelry, cordage used in crafts, etc.
  • Food: For the purposes of this database, food uses of plants are defined as: Plants used as consumed food, spices and seasonings, but not teas or tonics.
  • Customs: For the purposes of this database, customary uses of plants are defined as: Plants involved in a customary ceremony, ritual or traditional event, including ritual smoking, chewing tobacco, war rituals, special mats used to sit on during ceremonies. Customary uses of plants, in this database, does not including plants used for recreation (material), structures where ceremonies take place (material) or medicinal smoking (medicinal).
  • Eastern Myaamia Lands: Eastern Myaamia lands (eastern myaamionki) are centered around northern Indiana, and including western Ohio, eastern Illinois, southern Michigan, and the northernmost portions of Kentucky.
  • Western Myaamia Lands: Western Myaamia lands (western myaamionki) include western Kansas and northeastern Oklahoma.