Online Encyclopedia

LYCOPODIUM

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 153 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LYCOPODIUM  , the

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principal genus of the Lycopodiaceae, a natural order of the Fern-allies (see PTEIIDOPHYTA) . They are flowerless herbs, with an erect, prostrate or creeping widely-branched stem, with- small
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simple leaves which thickly cover the stem and branches . The " fertile " leaves are arranged in cones, and bear spore-cases (sporangia) in their axils, containing spores of one kind only . The prothallium
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developed from the spore is a subterranean mass of tissue of considerable
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size, and bears the male and
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female
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organs (antheridia and archegonia) . There are about a
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hundred
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species widely distributed in temperate and tropical climates; five occur in Britain on heaths and moors, chiefly in mountainous districts, and are known as club- , Two passages of the
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Cassandra, 1446–1450 and 1226–1282, in which the career of the
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Roman
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people and their universal
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empire are spoken of, could not possibly have been written by an Alexandrian poet of 250 B.C . Hence it has been maintained by Niebuhr and others that the poem was written, by a later poet mentioned by
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Tzetzes, but the opinion of Welcker that these paragraphs are a later interpolation is generally considered more probable.mosses . The commonest species, L. clavatum, is also known as stag-horn
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moss . Gerard, in 1597, described two kinds of lycopodium (Herball, p . 1373) under the names Muscus denticulatus and Muscus clavatus (L. clavatum) as " Club Mosse or Woolfes Clawe Mosse," the names being in Low Dutch, " Wolfs Clauwen," from the resemblance of the club-like or claw-shaped shoots to the toes of a wolf, " whereupon we first named it Lycopodion." Gerard also speaks of its emetic and many other supposed virtues . L . Selago and L. catharticum (a native of the
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Andes) have been said to be, at least when fresh, cathartic; s7yasssy . From Strasburger's Lehrbuch der Botanik, by permission of Gustav Fischer .

A, Old prothallus. the specialized erect branches B, Prothallus bearing a

young bearing the strobile or cones . sporophyte . H, Sporophyte bearing the single G, Polian of a mature plant, sporangium on its upper showing the creeping habit,
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surface. the adventitious roots and J, Spore . but, with the exception of the spores of L. clavatum (" lycopodium powder "), lycopodium as a drug has fallen into disuse . The powder is used for
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rolling pills in, as a dusting powder for infants' sores, &c . A tinctura lycopodii, containing one
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part of the powder to ten of
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alcohol (9c %), has been given, in doses of 15 to 6o minims, in cases of irritation and spasm of the bladder . The powder is highly inflammable, and is used in pyrotechny and for artificial
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lightning on the stage . If the hand be covered with the powder it cannot be wetted on being plunged into
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water . Another use of lycopodium is for dyeing; woollen
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cloth boiled with species of lycopodium, as L. clavatum, becomes blue when dipped in a bath of Brazil wood .

End of Article: LYCOPODIUM
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