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Observations placeholder

PubMed paper - Native American Indians - Hallucinogenic harvester ants

Identifier

006451

Type of Spiritual Experience

Out of body
Hallucination

Number of hallucinations: 1

Background

A description of the experience

RITUAL AND THERAPEUTIC USE OF "HALLUCINOGENIC" HARVESTER ANTS (POGONOMYRMEX) IN NATIVE SOUTH-CENTRAL CALIFORNIA  - KEVIN P. GROARK
Department of Anthropology
University ofCalifornia, Los Angeles
Los Angeles, CA 90024
Summer 1996

ABSTRACT.-Red harvester ants of the genus Pogonomyrmex played a central role as vision-inducing agents in the religious and medical systems of many indigenous groups in southern and south-central California. The ants were ingested alive in massive quantities in order to induce prolonged catatonic states, during which hallucinogenic visions were reported to manifest. They also played an important role in both curative and preventative medicine, treating a diverse body of natural and supernatural ailments.

In this article I present an ethnographic and toxicological overview of the ritual and therapeutic use of red ants, bringing together both published and unpublished accounts in an attempt to reconstruct this poorly-known facet of indigenous California culture. The data presented in this paper strongly suggest that, through either direct or indirect action on the central nervous system, massive quantities of Pogonomyrmex venom are capable of producing highly altered metabolic states during which hallucinatory visions are apt to manifest. This topic is of considerable interest, as it is the first well  documented ethnographic example of an hallucinogenic agent of insect origin.

The source of the experience

Native American Indians

Concepts, symbols and science items

Concepts

Symbols

Science Items

Activities and commonsteps

Commonsteps

References