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Hinahina, hinahina, Maui wormwoodAsteraceae (Sunflower family)Endemic to the Hawaiian Islands (Maui)Oahu (Cultivated), Hawaii, USAThe Hawaiian name hinahina means gray or grayish; hinahina, from hina, is gray, gray- or white-haired in reference to the plant color.Early Hawaiians used hinahina to preserve feather cloaks from insect destruction when stored in calabashes. Medicinally, the leaves were also pounded for asthma.The striking foliage has potential as a lei plant.EtymologyThe genus name Artemisia is derived from Artemis, Greek goddess of the hunt, wife of King Mausolus.The specific epithet mauiensis is in reference to the island of Maui, where this species is endemic.
nativeplants.hawaii.edu/plant/view/Artemisia_mauiensis
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Common Mugwort (Artemisia vulgaris) flower buds prior to opening - in a field behind our house in Ontario County, NY on August 17. This aromatic mugwort is native to Eurasia, north Africa and Alaska. Elsewhere, it's a highly invasive alien weed. Numerous other species in the genus Artemisia are also called mugworts, but are also known as wormwoods. They all belong to the Asteraceae, or Composite family, in the Order Asterales.Photo: Canon XT + MP-E 65mm 1-5x macro + macro flash, exposure 1/200 sec., f/16, ISO 400 - Dave Spier - ref. # D078105 [resolution reduced for web & blog use] This photo along with photos of leaves [top and bottom surfaces] was submitted to iNaturalist.org as a permanent record.
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Aspen Springs, California, United States
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Aspen Springs, California, United States
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South Wellfleet, Massachusetts, United States
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Silver Springs, Nevada, United States
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California, United States
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2010-09-01 Burgenland, district Neusiedl/See (Hackelsberg - Junger Berg, 173 m AMSL).Leaf.German name: sterreich-Wermut
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California, United States
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Nevada, United States
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California, United States
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Nevada, United States
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Herbarium Blackwellianum emendatum et auctum, id est, Elisabethae Blackwell collectio stirpium.Norimbergae : Typis Io. Iosephi Fleischmanni, 1750-1773..
biodiversitylibrary.org/page/291053
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Nevada, United States
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Honolulu, Hawaii, United States
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2012-03-20 Lower Austria, district Bruck/LeithaYoung shoots and last year's growth; growing in the sandy cliffs of a rubble quarry.
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Sphaeromeria diversifolia (D.C. Eaton) Rydb.Common names include:Separateleaf chickensage, Differentleaf sphaeromeria, False sagebrushJuly 25, 2009, Big Cottonwood Canyon, Salt Lake County, Utah, quartzite crevices, Species is primarily limited to the Great Basin of Utah and Nevada
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Hinahina, hinahina, Maui wormwoodAsteraceae (Sunflower family)Endemic to the Hawaiian Islands (Maui)Oahu (Cultivated), Hawaii, USAThe Hawaiian name hinahina means gray or grayish; hinahina, from hina, is gray, gray- or white-haired in reference to the plant color.Early Hawaiians used hinahina to preserve feather cloaks from insect destruction when stored in calabashes. Medicinally, the leaves were also pounded for asthma.The striking foliage has potential as a lei plant.EtymologyThe genus name Artemisia is derived from Artemis, Greek goddess of the hunt, wife of King Mausolus.The specific epithet mauiensis is in reference to the island of Maui, where this species is endemic.
nativeplants.hawaii.edu/plant/view/Artemisia_mauiensis
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Copenhagen, Hovedstaden, Denmark
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Artemisia arborescens L.ASTERACEAELocal: Salinas, Ilhas Elicas, Sicilia, Italia.
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United States