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- Q4761571 subject Q13298727.
- Q4761571 abstract "Template:ForThe evergreen aneda (spelled either this way or as annedda by different 16th- to 17th-century sources) was used by Jacques Cartier and his men as a remedy against scurvy in the winter of 1535–1536. It is generally believed to have been Thuja occidentalis, a common tree in Quebec also known as Arborvitae. However, historian Jacques Mathieu has argued at length that aneda was more likely Abies balsamea, given that tree's role as a traditional remedy and given the much higher vitamin C content of its needles. Samuel de Champlain, around 1608, was unable to find the remedy, and some have supposed that the Indians had lost their knowledge of it in the intervening 72 years. However, a more common explanation is that the St. Lawrence Iroquoians whom Cartier met did not speak the same language as the Hurons or Iroquois living in the area at the time of Champlain, and so the term 'annedda' meant nothing to the latter group.".
- Q4761571 wikiPageWikiLink Q129060.
- Q4761571 wikiPageWikiLink Q13298727.
- Q4761571 wikiPageWikiLink Q147468.
- Q4761571 wikiPageWikiLink Q163865.
- Q4761571 wikiPageWikiLink Q190489.
- Q4761571 wikiPageWikiLink Q213396.
- Q4761571 wikiPageWikiLink Q428023.
- Q4761571 wikiPageWikiLink Q68518.
- Q4761571 wikiPageWikiLink Q68529.
- Q4761571 wikiPageWikiLink Q7321.
- Q4761571 comment "Template:ForThe evergreen aneda (spelled either this way or as annedda by different 16th- to 17th-century sources) was used by Jacques Cartier and his men as a remedy against scurvy in the winter of 1535–1536. It is generally believed to have been Thuja occidentalis, a common tree in Quebec also known as Arborvitae.".
- Q4761571 label "Aneda".