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Chelidonium - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chelidonium majus , commonly known as the greater celandine or tetterwort (in America, the latter refers to Sanguinaria canadensis ), is the only species in the genus Chelidonium , family P...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chelidonium
Lesser celandine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lesser celandine , ( Ranunculus ficaria , syn. Ficaria grandiflora Robert Ficaria verna Huds.) is a low-growing, hairless perennial plant, with fleshy dark green, heart-shaped leaves. The plant...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lesser_celandine
The celandine plant, a member of the poppy family, grows in Europe and the temperate and subarctic regions of Asia. ... The celandine plant, a member of the poppy family, grows in Europe and the temperate and subarctic regions of Asia. The roots, herb, and juice are used as remedies.
www.cancer.org/docroot/eto/content/eto_5_3x_celandine.a... www.cancer.org/docroot/eto/content/eto_5_3x_celandine.asp?sitearea=eto
Celandine; (Chelidonium majus); Click on graphic for larger imag ... ---Habitat---The Lesser Celandine, one of the very earliest of spring flowers, its cheery, starlike blossoms lighting up our hedges even before winter is quite spent, is distributed throughout Europe, Western Asia, and North Africa, in these islands,
www.botanical.com/botanical/mgmh/c/celles44.html · Cached
Lesser celandine, also known as fig buttercup, is an herbaceous, perennial plant. Plants have a basal rosette of dark green, shiny, stalked leaves that are kidney- to heart-shaped. ... NOTE: Lesser celandine closely resembles marsh marigold (Caltha palustris), a native wetland plant that occurs in the eastern United States.
www.nps.gov/plants/alien/fact/rafi1.htm · Cached
Welcome to Celandine Paper ... Celebrate the art of written correspondence with luxurious letterpress cards. Dash off a quick note of thanks, wish an old friend a happy birthday, or spread some holiday cheer. We hope that you’ll find something to inspire you below...
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Celandine poppy or Wood poppy (Stylophorum diphyllum) ... To learn more about Celandine poppy , visit its profile at the USDA Plants Databas ... Member of the Papaveraceae (Poppy) family. Growing in damp woods, 10 - 16 inches, March through May. The flower is yellow with 4 fragile, round petals and has paired pale,
www.butler.edu/herbarium/wildflowers/flowerpages/celand... www.butler.edu/herbarium/wildflowers/flowerpages/celandine.html
: garden celandine, tetterwort ... : Celandine is named after the Greek word for the swallow, because it starts flowering when they arrive and stops when they leave. According to the Doctrine of Signatures, this plant, with its yellow juice, was deemed suitable for biliary complaints.
www.purplesage.org.uk/profiles/greatercelandine.htm www.purplesage.org.uk/profiles/greatercelandine.htm · Cached
Celandine, Greater; (Chelidonium majus); Click on graphic for larger imag ... The Celandine is a herbaceous perennial. The root is thick and fleshy. The stem, which is slender, round and slightly hairy, grows from 1 1/2 to 3 feet high and is much branched; at the points where the branches are given off, it is swollen...
botanical.com/botanical/mgmh/c/celgre43.html · Cached
Greater celandine grows primarily in Europe and Asia, although it has been introduced in North America. The leaves and small yellow flowers of greater celandine are used as medicine. ... Greater celandine, like other members of the Papaveraceae (poppy) family, contains alkaloids as its major constituents.
www.vitacost.com/Healthnotes/Herb/Greater-Celandine.asp... www.vitacost.com/Healthnotes/Herb/Greater-Celandine.aspx