Kinnikinic

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Kin`ni`ki`nic´


n.1.Prepared leaves or bark of certain plants; - used by the Indians of the Northwest for smoking, either mixed with tobacco or as a substitute for it. Also, a plant so used, as the osier cornel (Cornus stolonijra), and the bearberry (Arctostaphylus Uva-ursi).
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, published 1913 by G. & C. Merriam Co.
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References in periodicals archive
Many of the articles deal with the challenge of saving various species of flora and fauna such as kinnikinic, algae, wild rice, and fish species.
On the floor one would perhaps see an old grandmother squatting and smoking her pipe filled with Indian tobacco --" kinnikinic." (48) Sometimes Elizabeth visited with her students' parents in their family residences, and she reported that conditions varied: "Some had comfortable homes that were orderly and neat, but the majority of them had only one room, no floor but the dirt, and two windows, those usually with an eastern exposure.
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