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Umbellularia

Umbellularia californica is a large hardwood tree native to coastal forests and the Sierra foothills of California, and to coastal forests extending into Oregon.[2] It is endemic to the California Floristic Province. It is the sole species in the genus Umbellularia.

Umbellularia
Foliage and flowers
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Magnoliids
Order: Laurales
Family: Lauraceae
Genus: Umbellularia
(C.G.D.Nees) Nuttall
Species:
U. californica
Binomial name
Umbellularia californica
Natural range
Synonyms

Sciadiodaphne Rchb.

The tree was formerly known as Oreodaphne californica.[3] In Yuki, it is called pōl’-cum ōl.[4] In Oregon, this tree is known as Oregon myrtle, while in California it is called California bay laurel, which may be shortened to California bay[5] or California laurel. It has also been called pepperwood, spicebush, cinnamon bush, peppernut tree, headache tree,[6] mountain laurel,[7] and balm of heaven.[7]

The tree's pungent leaves have a similar flavor to bay leaves, though stronger, and it may be mistaken for bay laurel. The dry wood has a color range from blonde (like maple) to brown (like walnut). It is considered an excellent tonewood and is sought after by luthiers and woodworkers.

The tree is a host of the pathogen that causes sudden oak death.

Naturalized occurrence of species in Snake Lake Park, Tacoma, Washington

Description

It is an evergreen tree growing to 30 metres (98 feet) tall with a trunk up to 90 centimetres (35 inches) thick.[8] The largest recorded tree is in Mendocino County, California, and measured (as of 1997) 33 m (108 ft) in height with a 36 m (119 ft) spread.[9] The thin bark is smooth and gray-brown when young, later turning reddish brown and scaly.[8] The fragrant leaves are smooth-edged and lance-shaped, 3–15 cm long and around a third as wide,[8] similar to the related bay laurel, though usually narrower, and without the crinkled margin of that species. The leaves are green, and lighter on the underside.[8] The bark and leaves have a pungent scent resembling camphor when bruised,[8] due to a chemical known as umbellulone.[6]

 
The leaves are entire and lance-shaped about 3–10 centimetres (1.2–3.9 in) long. They may substitute for the Mediterranean bay leaf in cooking.

The flowers are small, yellow or yellowish-green, produced in small umbels (hence the scientific name Umbellularia, "little umbel"). Unlike other "bay laurels" of the genus Laurus, Umbellularia has perfect flowers (male and female parts in the same flower).[10]

The fruit, also known as "California bay nut", is a round and green berry 2–2.5 cm long and 2 cm broad, lightly spotted with yellow, maturing purple. Under the thin, leathery skin, it consists of an oily, fleshy covering over a single hard, thin-shelled pit,[8] and resembles a miniature avocado. Umbellularia is in fact closely related to the avocado's genus Persea, within the family Lauraceae.[citation needed] The fruit ripens around October–November in the native range.

The oldest-known living laurel is the Jepson Laurel, named after Willis Linn Jepson, in San Mateo County. The tree lives on San Francisco Water Department land, which agency cares for the tree. With their permission, the county parks places a placard and a picnic area nearby.[11]

Distribution and habitat

 
This tree, on Permanente Creek in Rancho San Antonio County Park, Santa Clara County, California, is one of the largest of its species in the state. Since this photograph, the tree was split, and half the tree broke off and fell in a storm. The other half is still thriving, and has more or less resumed the original canopy shape.
 
Lignotuber near ground level provides fire-resistant storage of energy and sprouting buds if fire damage requires replacement of the trunk or limbs.

Umbellularia is found in southwest Oregon and in California south to San Diego County. It is also found in the western foothills of the Sierra Nevada mountains. It occurs at altitudes from sea level up to 1,600 m (5,200 ft).[12] It is an introduced species in British Columbia,[13][14] Washington,[15] and northern Oregon.

It mostly inhabits redwood forests, California mixed woods, yellow pine forest, and oak woodlands. Bays occur in oak woodland close to the coast, and in northern California where moisture is sufficient, usually in or near riparian areas. The species is very shade tolerant. It is reduced to a shrub in extreme dry and hot habitats.[8]

During the Miocene, oak-laurel forests were found in Central and Southern California. Typical tree species included oaks ancestral to present-day California oaks, and an assemblage of trees from the laurel family, including Nectandra, Ocotea, Persea, and Umbellularia.[16][17] Only one native species from the laurel family, Umbellularia californica, remains in California today.

Ecology

The trees resprout after being killed by fire.[8] Deer browse the fresh sprouts.[8]

The species is a host of Phytophthora ramorum, the pathogen that causes the disease sudden oak death. It is important in this sense because it is one of two tree species (tanoak being the other) on which the pathogen readily produces spores.[18]

Uses

Historical usage

Umbellularia has long been valued for its many uses by Native Americans throughout the tree's range, including the Cahuilla, Chumash, Ohlone, Pomo, Miwok, Yuki, Coos, and Salinan people.[19] The Concow tribe call the plant sō-ē’-bä (Konkow language).[20]

Poultices of Umbellularia leaves were used to treat rheumatism and neuralgias.[21] A tea was made from the leaves to treat stomach aches, colds, sore throats, and to clear up mucus in the lungs.[22] The leaves were steeped in hot water to make an infusion that was used to wash sores.[21] The Pomo and Yuki tribes of Mendocino County treated headaches by placing a single leaf in the nostril or bathing the head with a laurel leaf infusion.[22]

Both the flesh and the inner kernel of the fruit have been used as food by Native Americans. The fatty outer flesh of the fruit, or mesocarp, is palatable raw for only a brief time when ripe; prior to this the volatile aromatic oils are too strong, and afterwards the flesh quickly becomes bruised, like that of an overripe avocado.[23] Native Americans dried the fruits in the sun and ate only the lower third of the dried mesocarp, which is less pungent.[22]

The hard inner seed underneath the fleshy mesocarp, like the pit of an avocado, cleaves readily in two when its thin shell is cracked. The pit itself was traditionally roasted to a dark chocolate-brown color, removing much of the pungency and leaving a spicy flavor.[21] Roasted, shelled "bay nuts" were eaten whole, or ground into powder and prepared as a drink which resembles unsweetened chocolate. The flavor, depending on roast level, has been described variously as "roast coffee," "dark chocolate" or "burnt popcorn".[24] The powder might also be used in cooking or pressed into cakes and dried for winter storage.[21] It has been speculated that the nuts contain a stimulant;[25][26] however this possible effect has been little documented by biologists.

Modern usage

The leaf has been used in cooking but contains large amounts of the toxic compound umbellulone, which causes methemoglobinemia. Umbellulone is absent from culinary bay leaves (Laurus nobilis). Umbellularia leaf imparts a somewhat stronger camphor/cinnamon flavor compared to the Mediterranean bay.[27]

Some modern-day foragers and wild food enthusiasts have adopted Native American practices regarding the edible roasted fruit, the bay nut.[23][25][28]

Umbellularia californica is also used in woodworking. It is considered a tonewood, used to construct the backs and sides of acoustic guitars. The wood is very hard and fine, and is also made into bowls, spoons, and other small items and sold as "myrtlewood". It is also grown as an ornamental tree, both in its native area, and further north up the Pacific coast to Vancouver in Canada, and in western Europe. It can be planted as a hedge or windbreak.[8] It is occasionally used for firewood.

According to a modern Miwok recipe for acorn soup, "it is essential that you add a generous amount of California laurel" when storing acorns to dry, to keep insects away from the acorns.[29]

One popular use for the leaves is to put them between the bed mattresses to get rid of, or prevent, flea infestations.

The wood is used as lumber in furniture making, especially highly figured specimens.[30]

"Myrtlewood" money

"Myrtlewood" is the only wood still in use as a base "metal" for legal tender.[31] During the 1933 "interregnum of despair" between Franklin Roosevelt's election and his inauguration, the only bank in the town of North Bend, Oregon—the First National—was forced to temporarily close its doors, precipitating a cash-flow crisis for the City of North Bend. The city solved this problem by minting its own currency, using myrtlewood discs printed on a newspaper press. These coins, in denominations from 25 cents to $10, were used to pay employees, with the city promising to redeem them for cash as soon as it became available.

However, when the bank reopened and the city appealed for people to bring their myrtlewood money in to redeem it, many opted to keep their tokens as collector's items. After several appeals, the city announced that the tokens would remain legal tender in the city of North Bend in perpetuity. The unredeemed tokens have become very valuable, because of scarcity and historical interest. Fewer than 10 full sets are believed to exist.[32]

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ Stritch, L. (2018). "Umbellularia californica". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2018: e.T62572A68077480. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2018-2.RLTS.T62572A68077480.en. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  2. ^ "Umbellularia californica (Hook. & Arn.) Nutt". CalFlora. Retrieved 2012-02-05.
  3. ^ "The Plant List".
  4. ^ Plants Used by the Indians of Mendocino, California.
  5. ^ (xls). Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland. Archived from the original (xls) on 2015-06-26. Retrieved 2014-10-17.
  6. ^ a b Nassini, R.; et al. (2011). "The 'headache tree' via umbellulone and TRPA1 activates the trigeminovascular system". Brain. 135 (2): 376–90. doi:10.1093/brain/awr272. PMID 22036959.
  7. ^ a b John Henry Clarke (1986). A Dictionary of Practical Materia Medica. B. Jain Publishers/Médi-T. ISBN 978-81-7021-013-9.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Arno, Stephen F.; Hammerly, Ramona P. (2020) [1977]. Northwest Trees: Identifying & Understanding the Region's Native Trees (field guide ed.). Seattle: Mountaineers Books. pp. 277–280. ISBN 1-68051-329-X. OCLC 1141235469.
  9. ^ "National register of big trees: California-laurel: Umbellularia californica". American Forests, Washington D.C. Retrieved 2012-09-21.
  10. ^ "California Laurel". Urban Forest Ecosystems Institute. Retrieved 2018-02-04.
  11. ^ "https://parks.smcgov.org/what-see-crystal-springs-trail What to See on Crystal Springs Trail." San Mateo County. Accessed November 28, 2021.
  12. ^ "CPNWH Search Results".
  13. ^ "Collection Search".
  14. ^ "Collection Search".
  15. ^ "Umbellularia californica".
  16. ^ Axelrod, D. I. (2000). "A Miocene (10-12 Ma) Evergreen Laurel-Oak Forest from Carmel Valley, California". University of California Publications: Geological Sciences. Berkeley, CA, USA: University of California Press. 145.
  17. ^ Barbour, M. G.; Keeler-Wolf, T.; Schoenherr A. A. (2007). Terrestrial Vegetation of California. Berkeley, CA, USA: University of California Press. p. 56.
  18. ^ "UC Tries to Stop Northward Movement of Sudden Oak Death". University of California, Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources. May 3, 2006. Retrieved 2012-09-21.
  19. ^ "Umbellularia Californica". USDA Plant Guide.
  20. ^ Chesnut, Victor King (1902). Plants used by the Indians of Mendocino County, California. Government Printing Office. p. 408. Retrieved 24 August 2012.
  21. ^ a b c d Goodrich, J. S.; Lawson, C.; Lawson, V. P. (1980). Kashaya Pomo Plants. Heyday Books. p. 176. ISBN 978-0-930588-86-1.
  22. ^ a b c Chesnut, V. K. (1902). Plants Used by the Indians of Mendocino County, California. Contributions from the U.S. National Herbarium Vol. VII. Reprinted 1974 by Mendocino County Historical Society. p. 114. LCCN 08010527. OCLC 6218739.
  23. ^ a b FeralKevin: Foraging, Bushcraft, Permaculture, and Rewilding blog.
  24. ^ Kelly, I. (1978). Coast Miwok. Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 8. Smithsonian Institution. p. 108. ISBN 0-16-004574-6.
  25. ^ a b "The California Bay Laurel". Paleotechnics. Paleotechnics.com.
  26. ^ Moerman, D. E. (1998). Native American Ethnobotany. Timber Press. p. 927. ISBN 978-0-88192-453-4.
  27. ^ Vizgirdas, R. S.; Rey-Vizgirdas, E. M. (2006). Wild Plants of the Sierra Nevada. University of Nevada Press. p. 108. ISBN 978-0-87417-535-6.
  28. ^ Sunny Savage (March 6, 2008). "California Bay Laurel". Wild Food Plants (blog). Retrieved 2012-09-21.
  29. ^ "Nupa (Acorn) Soup". NativeTech: Indigenous Food and Traditional Recipes. Retrieved 2012-09-16.
  30. ^ "Northwest Timber: Wood Terms & Info". nwtimber.com. Retrieved 25 July 2016.
  31. ^ . Realoregongift.com. Archived from the original on 2013-12-18. Retrieved 2012-08-17.
  32. ^ Finn J.D. John (August 29, 2010). "When banks closed, town of North Bend minted its own money — out of wood". Offbeat Oregon History. Retrieved 2012-08-17.

External links

  • MeSH: Umbellularia - Umbellularia californica (California Bay Laurel)
  • Jepson Flora Project: Umbellularia californica
  • "Umbellularia californica", Index of Species Information, U.S. Forest Service
  • "Paleotechnics: The California Bay Laurel"
  • "Encyclopedia of Stanford Trees, Shrubs, and Vines: Umbellularia californica"

umbellularia, californica, large, hardwood, tree, native, coastal, forests, sierra, foothills, california, coastal, forests, extending, into, oregon, endemic, california, floristic, province, sole, species, genus, foliage, flowersconservation, statusleast, con. Umbellularia californica is a large hardwood tree native to coastal forests and the Sierra foothills of California and to coastal forests extending into Oregon 2 It is endemic to the California Floristic Province It is the sole species in the genus Umbellularia UmbellulariaFoliage and flowersConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade MagnoliidsOrder LauralesFamily LauraceaeGenus Umbellularia C G D Nees NuttallSpecies U californicaBinomial nameUmbellularia californica Hook amp Arn Nutt Natural rangeSynonymsSciadiodaphne Rchb The tree was formerly known as Oreodaphne californica 3 In Yuki it is called pōl cum ōl 4 In Oregon this tree is known as Oregon myrtle while in California it is called California bay laurel which may be shortened to California bay 5 or California laurel It has also been called pepperwood spicebush cinnamon bush peppernut tree headache tree 6 mountain laurel 7 and balm of heaven 7 The tree s pungent leaves have a similar flavor to bay leaves though stronger and it may be mistaken for bay laurel The dry wood has a color range from blonde like maple to brown like walnut It is considered an excellent tonewood and is sought after by luthiers and woodworkers The tree is a host of the pathogen that causes sudden oak death Naturalized occurrence of species in Snake Lake Park Tacoma Washington Contents 1 Description 2 Distribution and habitat 3 Ecology 4 Uses 4 1 Historical usage 4 2 Modern usage 4 2 1 Myrtlewood money 5 Gallery 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksDescription EditIt is an evergreen tree growing to 30 metres 98 feet tall with a trunk up to 90 centimetres 35 inches thick 8 The largest recorded tree is in Mendocino County California and measured as of 1997 33 m 108 ft in height with a 36 m 119 ft spread 9 The thin bark is smooth and gray brown when young later turning reddish brown and scaly 8 The fragrant leaves are smooth edged and lance shaped 3 15 cm long and around a third as wide 8 similar to the related bay laurel though usually narrower and without the crinkled margin of that species The leaves are green and lighter on the underside 8 The bark and leaves have a pungent scent resembling camphor when bruised 8 due to a chemical known as umbellulone 6 The leaves are entire and lance shaped about 3 10 centimetres 1 2 3 9 in long They may substitute for the Mediterranean bay leaf in cooking The flowers are small yellow or yellowish green produced in small umbels hence the scientific name Umbellularia little umbel Unlike other bay laurels of the genus Laurus Umbellularia has perfect flowers male and female parts in the same flower 10 The fruit also known as California bay nut is a round and green berry 2 2 5 cm long and 2 cm broad lightly spotted with yellow maturing purple Under the thin leathery skin it consists of an oily fleshy covering over a single hard thin shelled pit 8 and resembles a miniature avocado Umbellularia is in fact closely related to the avocado s genus Persea within the family Lauraceae citation needed The fruit ripens around October November in the native range The oldest known living laurel is the Jepson Laurel named after Willis Linn Jepson in San Mateo County The tree lives on San Francisco Water Department land which agency cares for the tree With their permission the county parks places a placard and a picnic area nearby 11 Distribution and habitat Edit This tree on Permanente Creek in Rancho San Antonio County Park Santa Clara County California is one of the largest of its species in the state Since this photograph the tree was split and half the tree broke off and fell in a storm The other half is still thriving and has more or less resumed the original canopy shape Lignotuber near ground level provides fire resistant storage of energy and sprouting buds if fire damage requires replacement of the trunk or limbs Umbellularia is found in southwest Oregon and in California south to San Diego County It is also found in the western foothills of the Sierra Nevada mountains It occurs at altitudes from sea level up to 1 600 m 5 200 ft 12 It is an introduced species in British Columbia 13 14 Washington 15 and northern Oregon It mostly inhabits redwood forests California mixed woods yellow pine forest and oak woodlands Bays occur in oak woodland close to the coast and in northern California where moisture is sufficient usually in or near riparian areas The species is very shade tolerant It is reduced to a shrub in extreme dry and hot habitats 8 During the Miocene oak laurel forests were found in Central and Southern California Typical tree species included oaks ancestral to present day California oaks and an assemblage of trees from the laurel family including Nectandra Ocotea Persea and Umbellularia 16 17 Only one native species from the laurel family Umbellularia californica remains in California today Ecology EditThe trees resprout after being killed by fire 8 Deer browse the fresh sprouts 8 The species is a host of Phytophthora ramorum the pathogen that causes the disease sudden oak death It is important in this sense because it is one of two tree species tanoak being the other on which the pathogen readily produces spores 18 Uses EditHistorical usage Edit Umbellularia has long been valued for its many uses by Native Americans throughout the tree s range including the Cahuilla Chumash Ohlone Pomo Miwok Yuki Coos and Salinan people 19 The Concow tribe call the plant sō e ba Konkow language 20 Poultices of Umbellularia leaves were used to treat rheumatism and neuralgias 21 A tea was made from the leaves to treat stomach aches colds sore throats and to clear up mucus in the lungs 22 The leaves were steeped in hot water to make an infusion that was used to wash sores 21 The Pomo and Yuki tribes of Mendocino County treated headaches by placing a single leaf in the nostril or bathing the head with a laurel leaf infusion 22 Both the flesh and the inner kernel of the fruit have been used as food by Native Americans The fatty outer flesh of the fruit or mesocarp is palatable raw for only a brief time when ripe prior to this the volatile aromatic oils are too strong and afterwards the flesh quickly becomes bruised like that of an overripe avocado 23 Native Americans dried the fruits in the sun and ate only the lower third of the dried mesocarp which is less pungent 22 The hard inner seed underneath the fleshy mesocarp like the pit of an avocado cleaves readily in two when its thin shell is cracked The pit itself was traditionally roasted to a dark chocolate brown color removing much of the pungency and leaving a spicy flavor 21 Roasted shelled bay nuts were eaten whole or ground into powder and prepared as a drink which resembles unsweetened chocolate The flavor depending on roast level has been described variously as roast coffee dark chocolate or burnt popcorn 24 The powder might also be used in cooking or pressed into cakes and dried for winter storage 21 It has been speculated that the nuts contain a stimulant 25 26 however this possible effect has been little documented by biologists Modern usage Edit The leaf has been used in cooking but contains large amounts of the toxic compound umbellulone which causes methemoglobinemia Umbellulone is absent from culinary bay leaves Laurus nobilis Umbellularia leaf imparts a somewhat stronger camphor cinnamon flavor compared to the Mediterranean bay 27 Some modern day foragers and wild food enthusiasts have adopted Native American practices regarding the edible roasted fruit the bay nut 23 25 28 Umbellularia californica is also used in woodworking It is considered a tonewood used to construct the backs and sides of acoustic guitars The wood is very hard and fine and is also made into bowls spoons and other small items and sold as myrtlewood It is also grown as an ornamental tree both in its native area and further north up the Pacific coast to Vancouver in Canada and in western Europe It can be planted as a hedge or windbreak 8 It is occasionally used for firewood According to a modern Miwok recipe for acorn soup it is essential that you add a generous amount of California laurel when storing acorns to dry to keep insects away from the acorns 29 One popular use for the leaves is to put them between the bed mattresses to get rid of or prevent flea infestations The wood is used as lumber in furniture making especially highly figured specimens 30 Myrtlewood money Edit Myrtlewood is the only wood still in use as a base metal for legal tender 31 During the 1933 interregnum of despair between Franklin Roosevelt s election and his inauguration the only bank in the town of North Bend Oregon the First National was forced to temporarily close its doors precipitating a cash flow crisis for the City of North Bend The city solved this problem by minting its own currency using myrtlewood discs printed on a newspaper press These coins in denominations from 25 cents to 10 were used to pay employees with the city promising to redeem them for cash as soon as it became available However when the bank reopened and the city appealed for people to bring their myrtlewood money in to redeem it many opted to keep their tokens as collector s items After several appeals the city announced that the tokens would remain legal tender in the city of North Bend in perpetuity The unredeemed tokens have become very valuable because of scarcity and historical interest Fewer than 10 full sets are believed to exist 32 Gallery Edit Flowers open in late winter and early spring An unripe bay nut Nearly ripe bay nuts being prepared for roasting Roasted bay nuts ready for eating or grinding into a powdery paste for beverages and cooking This single Umbellularia lignotuber in Doyle Community Park supports multiple mature sprouts See also EditUmbelluloneReferences Edit Stritch L 2018 Umbellularia californica IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2018 e T62572A68077480 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2018 2 RLTS T62572A68077480 en Retrieved 19 November 2021 Umbellularia californica Hook amp Arn Nutt CalFlora Retrieved 2012 02 05 The Plant List Plants Used by the Indians of Mendocino California BSBI List 2007 xls Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland Archived from the original xls on 2015 06 26 Retrieved 2014 10 17 a b Nassini R et al 2011 The headache tree via umbellulone and TRPA1 activates the trigeminovascular system Brain 135 2 376 90 doi 10 1093 brain awr272 PMID 22036959 a b John Henry Clarke 1986 A Dictionary of Practical Materia Medica B Jain Publishers Medi T ISBN 978 81 7021 013 9 a b c d e f g h i j Arno Stephen F Hammerly Ramona P 2020 1977 Northwest Trees Identifying amp Understanding the Region s Native Trees field guide ed Seattle Mountaineers Books pp 277 280 ISBN 1 68051 329 X OCLC 1141235469 National register of big trees California laurel Umbellularia californica American Forests Washington D C Retrieved 2012 09 21 California Laurel Urban Forest Ecosystems Institute Retrieved 2018 02 04 https parks smcgov org what see crystal springs trail What to See on Crystal Springs Trail San Mateo County Accessed November 28 2021 CPNWH Search Results Collection Search Collection Search Umbellularia californica Axelrod D I 2000 A Miocene 10 12 Ma Evergreen Laurel Oak Forest from Carmel Valley California University of California Publications Geological Sciences Berkeley CA USA University of California Press 145 Barbour M G Keeler Wolf T Schoenherr A A 2007 Terrestrial Vegetation of California Berkeley CA USA University of California Press p 56 UC Tries to Stop Northward Movement of Sudden Oak Death University of California Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources May 3 2006 Retrieved 2012 09 21 Umbellularia Californica USDA Plant Guide Chesnut Victor King 1902 Plants used by the Indians of Mendocino County California Government Printing Office p 408 Retrieved 24 August 2012 a b c d Goodrich J S Lawson C Lawson V P 1980 Kashaya Pomo Plants Heyday Books p 176 ISBN 978 0 930588 86 1 a b c Chesnut V K 1902 Plants Used by the Indians of Mendocino County California Contributions from the U S National Herbarium Vol VII Reprinted 1974 by Mendocino County Historical Society p 114 LCCN 08010527 OCLC 6218739 a b FeralKevin Foraging Bushcraft Permaculture and Rewilding blog Kelly I 1978 Coast Miwok Handbook of North American Indians Vol 8 Smithsonian Institution p 108 ISBN 0 16 004574 6 a b The California Bay Laurel Paleotechnics Paleotechnics com Moerman D E 1998 Native American Ethnobotany Timber Press p 927 ISBN 978 0 88192 453 4 Vizgirdas R S Rey Vizgirdas E M 2006 Wild Plants of the Sierra Nevada University of Nevada Press p 108 ISBN 978 0 87417 535 6 Sunny Savage March 6 2008 California Bay Laurel Wild Food Plants blog Retrieved 2012 09 21 Nupa Acorn Soup NativeTech Indigenous Food and Traditional Recipes Retrieved 2012 09 16 Northwest Timber Wood Terms amp Info nwtimber com Retrieved 25 July 2016 Myrtle Tree Story Realoregongift com Archived from the original on 2013 12 18 Retrieved 2012 08 17 Finn J D John August 29 2010 When banks closed town of North Bend minted its own money out of wood Offbeat Oregon History Retrieved 2012 08 17 External links EditMeSH Umbellularia Umbellularia californica California Bay Laurel Jepson Flora Project Umbellularia californica Umbellularia californica Index of Species Information U S Forest Service Paleotechnics The California Bay Laurel Encyclopedia of Stanford Trees Shrubs and Vines Umbellularia californica Wikimedia Commons has media related to Umbellularia californica Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Umbellularia amp oldid 1118399873, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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