* Tobacco
Tobacco seems as if it will always be with us, no matter how stringent policies may be against its consumption. But have you ever wondered HOW and WHY smoking started, and WHERE this tobacco originated from? I came across the following article by Mark Diller in a "Knowledge News" article, and thought I'd share it.
~ Rads
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How We Started Smoking
Tobacco is a plant in the nightshade family, which includes potatoes, tomatoes, eggplant, and chili peppers. It may have been cultivated in the Peruvian Andes as far back as 5000 BC. The first documented tobacco users were the Maya, who flourished in Central America between 1500 BC and AD 900.
By the time Columbus showed up in 1492, tobacco and its use had spread throughout the Americas. Native Americans valued tobacco's medicinal and psychoactive properties. Depending on the dose, its active (and highly addictive) ingredient, nicotine, can both stimulate and tranquilize.
Native American shamans weren't gathering for a puff in the parlor. They took tobacco in doses large enough to produce hallucinations, trances, or even death. It's hard to smoke your way to a dose that large, so they used other methods--chewing tobacco leaves, drinking tobacco tea, snorting tobacco snuff, or even taking tobacco enemas.
Tobacco Takes Off
When Columbus returned to the Old World, he took tobacco with him. By the 16th century, Europe had acquired a taste for this new "wonder drug"--though Europeans were more likely to smoke cigars than take tobacco enemas.
Tobacco gained a foothold in England's American colonies in 1610, when John Rolfe (later Pocahontas's husband) arrived in Virginia's Jamestown. On his way, Rolfe had stopped in the West Indies and picked up some tobacco seeds. Planting those seeds in Virginia made Rolfe rich and helped turn tobacco into a colonial cash crop. There was a side effect, though. Demand for manual labor on tobacco farms helped spread slavery throughout the American South.
American tobacco fed Europe's new demand for smoke. Cigars and pipes gained a following as luxury items, but they were priced beyond the reach of most. Beggars in Spain got the idea of shredding discarded cigar butts and rolling the tobacco in scraps of paper. These were called cigarillos, Spanish for "little cigars." By Napoleon's time, French and English soldiers acquired a taste for these "cigarettes," and ordinary folks have been smoking ever since.
Cancer Sticks
The cigarette's heyday came during World War I, when American tobacco companies managed to get them included in military field rations. When the war was over, soldiers brought their nicotine habits home, and cigarette sales boomed. But the party didn't last. By 1950, research had linked cigarettes to lung cancer. By the close of the 20th century, smoking was linked to as many as one-third of all cancer deaths among men.
Over the last two decades, smoking has decreased in America and western Europe, but it has increased in the developing world. Today there are more than a billion smokers worldwide, inheritors of tobacco's ancient tradition--and its deadly side-effects, too.
Mark Diller
July 19, 2005
4 Comments:
Interesting.
I'm glad I never picked up that habit.
And who is this Mark Diller, does he have a website?
He is one of the writers for the "Knowledge News" newsletter.
aria
While I was in Africa I saw some guys from Tobacco firms (foreign firms of course!)give away cigarettes to young consumers in bars and discos to get them "hooked on" tobacco...Now the sales have gone down in western countries...they are trying to open up a new market for tobacco!
Lots will die because of the very few informations they have on the danger of smoking!! Makes me sick!
Pierre Paris 9.20pm
Yeah, I don't think the laws are stringent enough to prevent them [ie. tobacco companies] from continuing to mass produce death in packets.
aria
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