RICHARD EVANS SCHULTES
"THE BOOKS OF REVELATIONS"
EDITED BY JOHN W. ALLEN
JOHN W. ALLEN'S
"MODERN FIELD RESEARCH ON TEONANÁCATL 1915-1940."
Excerpts from “Mushroom Pioneers” by John W. Allen, 2009 http://www.erowid.org edition. Chapter One and Two, Page 15-32).
(This chapter is copyright by John W. Allen and Erowid).
CHAPTER ONE
"MODERN FIELD RESEARCH ON TEONANÁCATL 1915-1940"
Today in México, only a handful of remote montane tribes still
practice the customs and rituals of what once must have been a splendid
and powerful system of worship and empirical magic. So utterly complete
was the neglect and ignorance in our western world of the
ethnoborological aspects of Aztec and other Mexican shamanism, that in
1915, William E. Safford, a reputable and distinguished USA botanist who
was than a sort of expert on the subject of many Native American
psychotropic plants, claimed that the visionary mushrooms as described
in the Spanish histories did not in fact exist and that the
Mesoamérican Indians had never used such, whether before, during, or
after the conquest. Disdaining the graphic testimony of several
Spanish chroniclers, Safford dismissed the well-documented evidence of
the chroniclers, mostly clerics, who described as mushroomic, the
effects the mushrooms allegedly had upon those who consumed them.
There is no evidence any of the Spaniards deigned to sample the
psychoptic mushrooms.
Safford
(1915) presented a botanical society the results of his study of an
Aztec sacred inebriant referred to in a few historical sources as teonanácatl
which means "wondrous mushroom." He claimed that the so-called
wondrous mushrooms were in fact dried peyote buttons and that no
mushrooms had been used as inebriants by the native peoples of
Mesoamérica. Safford's colleagues displayed little interest when he
claimed that the word teonanácatl simply meant peyote. In his paper, he
reproduced a photograph of dried peyote buttons. These could easily
have been mistaken for dried mushroom-caps, which is what they vaguely
resembled to the untrained eye. Safford relied on the fact that "three
centuries have failed to reveal that an endemic fungus is being used as
an intoxicant in Mexico. Nor is such a fungus mentioned either in works
on mycology or pharmacology, yet the belief prevails even now that
there is a narcotic Mexican fungus."
According to Safford, the early Spanish descriptions of numerous
medicinal plants from Mesoamérica led him to believe that the Aztec
entheogen ololiuhqui was either the seed of Datura or of a
morning-glory species, but he further denied that either plant provoked
visionary effects (for a more detailed description of the properties of
the sacred morning- glory seeds, see Albert
Hofmann's biography, "LSD: My Problem Child" [1980]).
As late as 1921, Safford still held firm to his theory by again
denying the existence of the sacred mushrooms, claiming that they were
simply dried peyote buttons. Safford
(1923) also noted: "Peyote has been called a habit-forming drug, and
some writers have likened it to hashish, or Indian Hemp, the latter
which had been introduced into the country of México and our southwest
under the name of Marijuana, is a most dangerous drug. Introduced
clandestinely into prisons, it has of course, been the cause of riots.
Its use is now forbidden in México by the government."
It should be obvious to anyone who reads the above letter by Safford
that he was a confirmed pharmacophilac and thanks to his prominence
the mushrooms continued to be obscured from the world until the late
1930's when they were once again brought to the attention of the
scientific community.
In the second decade of this century, Austrian Blas
Pablo Reko (1919), a physician with an interest in
ethnobotany, learned that some groups of Indians living in the Mexican
state of Oaxaca were still using psychoptic mushrooms in secret
ceremonies perhaps involving ancient rites. These rites were performed
apparently for the purpose of divinatory healing. Reko published his
findings in a journal entitled El México Antiguo.
Reko subsequently discussed this discovery with his colleagues, who
paid little attention to his mushroomic theories and showed no interest
in pursuing this information on the supposititious use of inebriating mushrooms by the
Indians of Mesoamérica. Reko wrote that teonanácatl was "Div.
géneros de hongos, especialmente un hongo negro que crece sobre
estiércol y produce efectos narcóticos." ["Various genera of mushrooms, especially a black
mushroom that grows on dung and produces psychotropic effects"].

Figure 1. Blas Pablo Reko drawn by E. W. Smith.
Sketch courtesy of Richard Evans Schultes.
Reko
(1923) later wrote to Dr. J. N. Rose of the United States National
Herbarium that "I see in your description of Lophorphora (peyote)
that Dr. Safford believes this plant to be the `teonanácatl' of
Sahagún which is surely wrong. It is actually as Sahagún states, a
fungus which grows on dung heaps and which is still used under the same
old name by the Indians of the Sierra Juarez in Oaxaca in their
religious feasts." Safford's last defender, Huntington Cairns
(1929), became the last person to expound the Safford theory.
B. P. Reko's cousin, Victor
A. Reko (1928), published the first objection to Safford's
claims. It appeared in a book written years later in 1936. Below is an
excerpt describing the effects of the mushrooms taken from that book
entitled Magische Gifte: Rausche und Betäubungsmittel der Neuen Welt
("Magical Poisons: inebriants and Narcotics of the New World"):
"The nanacates are poisonous mushrooms which have nothing to do
with peyote. It is known from olden times that their use induces
intoxication, states of ecstasy and mental aberrations, but,
notwithstanding the dangers attendant upon their use, people everywhere
they grow take advantage of their intoxicating properties up to the
present time."
In 1936, an Austrian engineer, Roberto J. Weitlaner, who was also an
avid ethnobotanist, spent four days in Huautla de Jiménez, Oaxaca,
where he was engaged in linguistic investigations. Weitlaner had learned
of the existence of the sacred mushrooms from a Mazatec merchant named
José Dorantes. Dorantes had described to Weitlaner his reactions after
eating three of the mushrooms which were given to him during a
divinatory healing (Johnson,
1940). It was Weitlaner who first realized that these sacred mushrooms
were most likely the teonanácatl described in the chronicles of the
Spanish clerics. During this period, several mushroom specimens were
collected and forwarded to Blas Pablo Reko. Reko in turn sent the
specimens to Harvard University for botanical identification. However,
the specimens spoiled before they arrived, thus further delaying their
identification and proof of their existence to the scientific
community.
In 1936, Weitlaner became the first white man in modern times to observe
an actual sacred mushroom ceremony. Two years later, in 1938, his
daughter Irmgard, her fiancé Jean Basset Johnson and two friends (Louise
Lacaud and Bernard Bevan) continued the investigations begun by
Weitlaner. These intrepid investigators were not only able to gather a
considerable amount of data on Mazatec shamanism and the use of the
sacred mushrooms, but in the process became the first westerners to
witness a Mesoamérica shamanic mushroom ceremony. The velada was held
in a hut in the tiny montane village of Huautla de Jiménez. Johnson
(1939a) published two startling papers regarding his observations on
Mazatec "witchcraft." Furthermore, while in Oaxaca, these investigators
met Dr. Richard Evans Schultes and Dr. Blas Pablo Reko who were also in
Huautla collecting ethnomycological data and mushroom specimens.
While Johnson referred to these ceremonies as examples of
"witchcraft", it should be noted that ethnobotanist William
Emboden (1979) mentioned that certain modern-day "witches" use
a species of Panaeolus mushroom as one of many inebriants in their
rituals. Emboden said that the fungus used by a cult of contemporary
witches living in Portugal was identified by Roger Heim as Panaeolus
papilionaceus which may or may not be a synonym for Panaeolus
subbalteatus or possibly Copelandia cyanescens.
PART TWO
Richard Evans Schultes
The collecting of teonanácatl mushrooms took place when a young
Harvard botanist, Richard Evans Schultes, made a trip to Huautla de
Jiménez with Blas Pablo Reko Schultes, Pers.
Comm. 1989) and collected several specimens of mushrooms which were
suspected of being used in "magico-religious ceremonies." After
sun-drying several specimens of these mushrooms, they mailed these
samples to Harvard University for identification.
Mushrooms collected by Schultes
(1939, 1940, 1978) and Schultes and Reko, were later identified as Stropharia
cubensis Earle, Psilocybe caerulescens Heim and some
specimens of Psilocybe mexicana Heim which were mixed and
confused by the presence of another mushroom identified as Panaeolus
campanulatus var. sphinctrinus. After these mushrooms were
deposited in the herbarium at Harvard, confusion surrounded their
botanical identification and their equivalence with the sacred mushroom
of the Aztecs until the early 1950's (these discoveries will be
discussed in Chapter Three).
Richard Evans Schultes was one of the most remarkable man of the 21
century. A
pioneers involved in identification of New World shamanic plants,
especially those from Mesoamérica and the Amazonia of Colombia in South
America. His research into psychoptic plants is undoubtedly the most
extensive ever undertaken by any botanical scientist during the past 100 years.
Richard Evans Schultes, Jeffrey Professor of Biology and Director of
the Botanical Museum of Harvard University (Emeritus), is a native
Bostonian. Not merely a botanical explorer, he is a noted
ethnobotanist and conservationist. Among his numerous awards are the
Cross of Boyacá, Colombia's highest honor, and the annual Gold Medal of
the World Wildlife Fund, presented by H.R.H. The Duke of Edinburgh; in
1987, he received the prestigious Tyler Prize for Environmental
Achievement.
His crowning achievement however, was the receipt of botany's Nobel
Prize---the Gold Medal of the Linnean Society at London in 1992.
Schultes is also on the exclusive list of 50 "Foreign Members" of that
in itself exclusive society.
His explorations and botanical identification of thousands of plants
from Amazonia is as immense as it is eclectic. During his fourteen
years in the Amazon, Schultes had collected more than 24,000 plants new
to science of which over 80 are entheogenic Davis, 1996). He
has also written more than two dozen books and over 100 scientific
articles on his discoveries. He is, moreover the only living
ethnobotanist to have more than two million acres of land named in his
honor; Sector Schultes, part of an Amazonian ecological preserve
formally designated in 1986 by the Colombian government.
The field of ethnobotany was Schultes' framework throughout his
life. His field work in Oaxaca, México in 1938 and 1939 was somewhat
limited due to the second world war. However, he made history by
pioneering the study of shamanic mushrooms of the Mazatec Indians.
Richard Evans Schultes was born in Boston, Massachusetts on January
12, 1915. When he was about six years old, Schultes developed an
illness which caused him severe stomach problems. During this period,
his father and mother would read to him and one book which caught
Schultes' attention was Richard Spruce's "Notes of a Botanist on the
Amazon and Andes." This was young Schultes' introduction to the world
of botany.
As a young child, Richard once read a floral guide given to him by
an uncle and after studying it, would collect leaves to identify and
press. It seems that this helped the young collector develop what some
people refer to as "the taxonomic eye."
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