RMP555R0–Roccella tinctoria, and Iceland moss, Cetraria islandica. Handcoloured botanical illustration drawn and engraved on steel by Weddell from John Stephenson and James Morss Churchill's 'Medical Botany: or Illustrations and descriptions of the medicinal plants of the London, Edinburgh, and Dublin pharmacopœias,' John Churchill, London, 1831.
RMHBBWD9–Iceland moss closeup
RF2HD189B–Dried Icelandic moss, folk remedy for coughs on white background
RMAEC0T4–Iceland moss growing on a red painted wooden post (France). Lichen poussant sur un poteau peint en rouge (France).
RFJA3YTJ–material, drug, anaesthetic, addictive drug, portrait format, means, agent,
RMRE3B09–. Practical botany. Botany. THE LICHENS 239 unavailable. Reindeer moss (JJladonia rangiferina) grows upon earth and rocks in great abundance throughout the north tem- perate and frigid zones, and at high altitudes in most mountain ranges. In winter it is eaten by animals, which find it green and nutritious when they remove the snow from above it. A few lichens are sometimes used as food for men, though they are not especially nutritious. A mucilaginous and starchy food is prepared from Cetraria islandica, a lichen which is known as Iceland moss. This and other food lichens are more or less bit
RF2E684C4–Iceland Moss green gray branches background
RM2F4FJW0–Iceland moss (Cetraria islandica)
RF2E683X2–Iceland moss lichen fungus background
RFDE2W55–Carpet of moss, South Iceland, Iceland, Europe
RMATKG09–Iceland Moss
RF2M5BYX9–Iceland moss (Cetraria islandica) growing on a branch, southern Sweden, Scandinavia
RFF7EACA–Lichen on a white background
RMRCBWX1–Iceland Moss (Cetraria islandica), a medicinal plant, historical chromolithography, ca. 1870
RMHBBW9A–Iceland moss closeup
RF2HD189H–Dried Icelandic moss, folk remedy for coughs on white background
RMM4EBP5–Iceland moss closeup
RMP5NFBC–Iceland moss, Cetraria islandica, native to Iceland and northern America. Handcoloured copperplate botanical engraving from Johannes Zorn's 'Afbeelding der Artseny-Gewassen,' Jan Christiaan Sepp, Amsterdam, 1796. Zorn first published his illustrated medical botany in Nurnberg in 1780 with 500 plates, and a Dutch edition followed in 1796 published by J.C. Sepp with an additional 100 plates. Zorn (1739-1799) was a German pharmacist and botanist who collected medical plants from all over Europe for his 'Icones plantarum medicinalium' for apothecaries and doctors.
RFJA3YTK–material, drug, anaesthetic, addictive drug, portrait format, means, agent,
RMRE2JWF–. Introduction to botany. Botany. FUNGI AND EUNGOUS DISEASES OF PLANTS 251 Reindeer moss QCladonia rangiferina) is eaten in winter by animals, which find it green and nutritious when they remove the snow from above it. A few lichens are used as food for men, though they are not especially nutritious. A mucilagi- nous and starchy food is prepared from Cetraria islandica, a lichen which is known as Iceland moss. In Sweden Stiota pul- monacea, a very bitter lichen, is sometimes used as a substitute for hops in processes of brewing. Various dyes are prepared from lichens and are known in the marke
RF2HD933H–Dried Icelandic moss, folk remedy for coughs on white background
RMM4EBP6–Iceland moss closeup
RFJA3YTM–material, drug, anaesthetic, addictive drug, portrait format, means, agent,
RMRG2RB2–. The Canadian field-naturalist. 46 The Canadian Field-Naturalist Vol. 85 Table 5. Species composition of ground lichen on the winter ranges used by the Interior Herd and the Avalon Peninsula and Humber River Herds. Per cent Ground Covered with Lichen Species by Caribou Herds Scientific Name of Interior Herds Avalon Herd 1 Lichen Species Western Central Eastern Humber R. Herd 12 2^ 6 7 3 4 9 10 Cladonia sylvatica^ Cladonia rangiferina Cladonia uncialis Cladonia alpestris Cladonia boryi Cladonia elongata Cladonia spp. Cetraria islandica Cetraria nivalis Sphaerophorus globosus Cornicularia spp.
RF2E6843E–True Iceland lichen Mossy, moss field iceland alpine