The Aztecs referred to as it teonanácatl, or “flesh of the Gods.”
Some who ate the intoxicating mushroom “noticed themselves dying in a imaginative and prescient and wept,” in line with an account by a Sixteenth-century Franciscan friar. “Others noticed themselves being eaten by a wild beast; others imagined that they have been capturing prisoners in battle, that they have been wealthy . . .”
Tantalizing references to the fungus could possibly be discovered within the few pre-Colombian paperwork to flee the fires of the Spanish Inquisition, and have been scattered throughout accounts of the New World written by the primary European missionaries and explorers to go to it.
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