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Turbina

Los reactores nucleares utilizan reacciones de fision nuclear para generar vapor, el cual se utiliza para mover las turbinas que producen electricidad. [Pg.69]

Ololiuqui Turbina corymbosa Flowering Lysergic acid amide... [Pg.346]

Ololiuqui (Turbina corymbosa). Reprinted with permission from Schultes RE, Hofman A. (1980). The Botany and Chemistry of Hallucinogens, 2nd ed. Springfield, III. Charles C. Thomas Publishers. [Pg.371]

Snake plant Turbina corymbosa Seeds Ololiuqui LSD-like compounds Drink Hallucinogenic Aztecs Mexico... [Pg.292]

There have recently been suggestions that the correct name of ololiuhqui is Turbina corymbosa (L.) Raf. [Pg.302]

Roberty separates Ipomoea, Rivea and Turbina, putting the three into different subfamilies. He keeps in Rivea only one species of India and Ceylon. In Turbina, he has three species T. corymbosa (which he states occurs in tropical America, the Canary Islands and the Philippines) and two other species of Mexico. [Pg.302]

Wilson, in a key to the genera of Convolvulaceae in the southeastern states, separates out Turbina... [Pg.302]

There is, furthermore, no reference to the binomial Turbina corymbosa as such. Wilson pointed... [Pg.303]

The question of whether to use the binomial Rivea corymbosa, or to assign the concept to Ipomoea on the one hand or Turbina on the other is, in effect, one of personal evaluation, by botanists, of the importance of characters. [Pg.303]

Investigators have shown that the leaves and stems (aerial portions) of both Turbina corymbosa and Ipomoea violacea... [Pg.393]

Turbina (formerly considered Riveaj corymbosa, a Mexican morning glory found to contain lysergic acid amides. [Pg.139]

The ethnobotanist Richard Evans Schultes sent samples of a cultivated Mexican morning glory to Hofmann in 1959, when it was still called Rivea corymbosa. He had seen it employed in divination by a Zapotec shaman in Oaxaca. Corymbosa is now considered one of five Turbina species—the only one appearing in the Americas. Though there are more than 500 species of Convolvulaceae widely scattered around the globe, they seem to have been used for their psychoactive properties only by tribes in the New World. [Pg.190]

The principle agent in this plant was found to be -lysergic acid amide, which had already been synthesized and was known as both ergine and LA-111. Other alkaloids of lesser importance found to be psychoactively influential in Turbina corymbosa were d-isolysergic acid amide (isoergine), chanodavine, elymoclavine and lysergol. [Pg.190]

Chromatograms of the alkaloidal extracts of 25 meg. of Turbina (Rivea) corymbosa (I), and 25 meg. Ipomoea violacea (II). [Pg.496]

O Mount Turbina on Baaaplata Furniahod by Driven Equipment Vendor Max. Allow. Tamp, F ... [Pg.66]

O Turbina Construction Safa For Runaway Soaad (2.11. t) Thrutt Coin. 12.9.Bl R pl e tl G Inteeral G Nona... [Pg.66]

TABLE 10.4. Suspension of Solids Power end Impeller Speed (hp/ipm) for Two Settling Velocities, as a Function of the Superficial Velocity of the Liquid Pitched Blade Turbina Impeller... [Pg.296]

O Turbina Construction Safa For Runaway Speed (2.11.1) Thruat Collar I2.9.BI Raplacaabla O Integra D Nona... [Pg.81]

Ipomoea violacea and Turbina corymbosa and LSD there is likewise a qualitative one, LSD being a very specific hallucinogen, whereas the psychic effects of lysergic acid amide and the total alkaloids of these... [Pg.142]


See other pages where Turbina is mentioned: [Pg.134]    [Pg.371]    [Pg.554]    [Pg.208]    [Pg.210]    [Pg.160]    [Pg.302]    [Pg.303]    [Pg.303]    [Pg.303]    [Pg.390]    [Pg.464]    [Pg.190]    [Pg.190]    [Pg.191]    [Pg.287]    [Pg.88]    [Pg.66]    [Pg.66]    [Pg.23]    [Pg.66]    [Pg.901]    [Pg.464]    [Pg.81]    [Pg.81]    [Pg.134]    [Pg.138]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.24 , Pg.27 , Pg.63 , Pg.230 ]




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Morning glory Turbina corymbosa

Turbina corymbosa

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