e/Glasswort

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has glosseng: The common name Glasswort came into use in the 16th Century to describe plants growing in England whose ashes could be used for making soda-based (as opposed to potash-based) glass. The glassworts are succulent, annual "halophytes", or plants that thrive in saline environments, such as seacoasts and salt marshes. While the original English glasswort plants belong to the genus Salicornia, the term has been extended over the years to halophyte plants from several genera, some of which are native to continents unknown to the medieval English, and growing in ecosystems such as mangrove swamps never envisioned when the term glasswort was coined.
lexicalizationeng: glasswort
instance of(noun) plant growing naturally in very salty soil
halophyte
Media
media:imgArthrocnemum-perenne01.jpg
media:imgSalicornia europaea MS 0802.JPG
media:imgSamphire Halosarcia.png

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