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| | Price-Pottenger Nutrition Foundation (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07) |
 | | The Aborigines would first detect the presence of the animal by its smell, claw marks or droppings, and confirm its presence by inserting a stick or frond tipped with honey into the hollow tree or log serving as a lair. |
 | | Of course, fresh, pure water was vital to the survival of the Aborigines, both in the subtropical coastal regions as well as in the arid interior. |
 | | Australian plants provided him with remedies for diarrhoea, coughs, colds, rheumatism, ear infections, toothache, upset stomach, headache, sore eyes, fevers, sores, rashes, hemorrhaging of childbirth, warts and ulcers -- as well as for treatment of wounds, burns, insect bites and snake poison. |
| www.price-pottenger.org /Articles/Aborigines.htm (4090 words) |
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