Herbarium: Medicinal Plants as Information

Introduction

About This Project

"Herbarium: Medicinal Plants as Information'' is a Scalar book project developed in a collaborative effort by the students in the Special Course in Society and Genetics 180-2: "Materia Medica, Pharmacology, and Bioprospecting," in the Winter Quarter 2022. This Project demonstrates the fruition of the collection-based research with the UCLA Herbarium, Mildred E. Mathias Botanical Garden, and associated historical materia medica, in a three-unit class structure of Collection (Unit 1), Comparative Analysis (Unit 2), and Digital Project (Unit 3). In the context of Unit 1 on Collection, students were introduced to the physical and digital specimens of the curated plants and their associated metadata in the UCLA Herbarium and Botanical Garden. The collection materials are realized in ten student projects, each of which contains two to three different species of plants that are curated in one of the categories: worts, sages, bark us, parasitic plants, cough, antiseptic, animal in the name, polygonacae, cardiovascular, and antiviral. Research on the collecting process and medicinal properties in medical practices of the project plants in comparison with those in the records of materia medica serves as the substance of the study in finding the connection and value between medical literature and bioprospecting. Within the subject matter, students learned about collections and the practice of collecting in relation of ACRL (Association of College & Research Library) Frameworks for information proficiency: "Information Has Value" and "Information Creation as a Process." The Comparative Analysis as the following sequence facilitated students to engage with digital media in hands-on activities, including close observation of details, spatial annotation, and visual narratives, intended to reveal the depth of possible meanings derived from the items in the collections. The final Digital Project manifests as this Scalar book with its multimedia content that presents public scholarship in the creation of knowledge on the researched medicinal plants.

We would like to thank the support of the Institute for Society and Genetics at UCLA, and the invaluable assistance from Anthony Baniaga, UCLA Herbarium Curator, providing a wellspring of resources and guidance, as well as from Christopher Gilman, UCLA Digital Curriculum Program Coordinator, who is the mastermind for the creation of the three-unit collection-based course and this Scalar Book.

Timeline of the Historical Materials

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