79. 
80. 
SI. 
83. 
Fiores, FRANCISCO A. Historia de la Medicina en México. México: Oficina 
Tipografica de la Secretaria de Fomento, 1886-1888. 3v. See Vol I, pp 55, 
258. 
Orozco Y Berra, Manuet. Historia Antigua y de la Conquista de México. 
México: G. A. Esteva, 1880. 4v. in 2, See Vol I, p 274; Vol III, pp 375, 437. 
Sarrorp, WituiaAM E. “An Aztec narcotic.” J Hered, Vol 6, July 1915, pp 
201-311. 
The economic botanist, renowned in his day, in a full-dress study here adumbrated 
the thesis that the hallucinogenic mushrooms had never existed, and that carly 
Spanish padres had confused peyote with fungi. R.G.W. 
. “Peyote, the narcotic mescal button of the Indians.” J Am med 
Assoc, Vol 77, No 16, Oct 15 1921, pp 1278-1279. 
This article, published shortly before Safford’s death, shows that he still persisted 
in his mistaken belief. r.G.w. 
Simfon, Rémt. Dictionnaire de la Langue nahuatl. 1885. See entries under 
nanacatl and teonanacatl. 
c. Archeological 
COMPILED BY STEPHAN F. DE BORHEGYI 
—. Borurcyi, STEPHAN F. pe. “Mushroom stones of Middle America. A 
geographically and chronologically arranged distributional chart.” See En- 
try 1, chart, in pocket at end of Vol II. Hereinafter referred to as Borhegyi’s 
chart, of which a revised version is in Entry 85. 
A geographic and chronologic distributional chart of Pre-Columbian mushroom 
stones and pottery mushroom forms found at various archeological sites in Mexico, 
Guatemala, and El Salvador published as an Appendix in end-pocket form to Vol II 
of the Wassons’ book. Borhegyi distinguishes 5 types (A to E) of stone and pottery 
mushrooms and illustrates with 48 specimens. (Average height 30cm) 
Types: Approx. Chronology (revised as of 1962) 
Type A Anthropomorphic Early or Mid-Pre-Classic (1000 B.C. to 
stone sculptures with 300 B.C.) 
plain or circularly 
grooved mushroom caps. 
Type B Effigy mushroom Early and Mid-Pre-Classic (1000 B.C. to 
stones with circularly 300 B.C.) 
grooved caps and 
square or tripod bases. 
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