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CARRIER OILS

POMEGRANATE SEED OIL

Camelina Oil

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  • CAMELINA OIL

  • LATIN NAME
    Camelina sativa

  • Family: Brassicaceae
  • ETYMOLOGY
    Sativa is from the Latin word for cultivated. The plant is also known as weedseed and 'gold of pleasure'.
  • THE PLANT AND ITS ENVIRONMENT
    Camelina was once a common weed found in cultivated crops, but it is now grown for its own sake in the South East of England. Records of the plant cultivation date back as far as the Iron Age  as the oil was used as a source of fuel as well as a skin moisturiser. It  is generally an annual crop, being sown in early spring  and harvested in late autumn: most of the domestic crop has been grown to produce seed for bird food.
  • THE OIL
    The oil has properties similar to those of sperm whale oil, for which it is increasingly being used as a replacement. It has good levels of bonded essential fatty acids and an unusually high amount of bonded eicosenoic acid (C20:1).

METHOD OF EXTRACTION
The seed contains between 35 and 40% oil and 30% protein but it is only 1-2 mm in length and 1 mm in width. This small size means it is difficult to extract the oil without the use of solvents.

 

PRINCIPAL CONSTITUENTS

TYPE BASED ON CONTENT - %
Saturated fatty acid units     
C12:0  lauric acid  <0.5 
C16:0  palmitic acid   3.0-8.0 
C18:0  steraic acid   2.0-5.0 
C20:0  arachidic acid  <2.0 
C22:0  behenic acid  <0.5 
C24:0  lignoceric acid  <0.5
Typical saturated fatty acid unit content        11 
Monounsaturated fatty acid units:     
C16:1 palmitoleic acid <0.5
C18:1  oleic acid  15 (13-26) 
C20:1  ecosenoic acid   15 (10-18) 
C22:1  erucic acid  0-4 
Typical monounsaturated fatty acid unit content     28 
Polyunsaturated fatty acid units     
C18:2 linoleic acid 18 (16-24)
C18:3 alpha linolenic acid 39 (33-40)
Typical polyunsaturated fatty acid unit content    61 

 

  • FOLK - LORE AND TRADITIONAL PLANT USES
    In Asia the seeds have long been used as a food source and in medical preparations for respiratory and metabolic disorders.
  • THERAPEUTIC PROPERTIES - INTERNAL USE
    Once the triacylglycerols have broken down, the longer chain fatty acids can be used by the body in the synthesis of cells.
  • THERAPEUTIC PROPERTIES - EXTERNAL USE
    See cosmetic use.
  • COSMETIC USE
    It is known that the seed and its components help to condition the plumage of canaries, giving glossy sheen, and this led to research which showed that the oil had good skin softening properties ( Product Information Sheet).
  • The oil can be used in formulae for skin creams and moisturisers as it is emollient, has good spreading properties and provides lubricity in both hair and skin preparations. It provides a protective coating to hair follicles (it is used by L'Oreal in hair products).
  • Camelina has a profile of bonded fatty acids which is similar to the oils present in marine fauna as the shark and sperm whale ( Press Release 1991). Indeed, it can be used as a replacement for sperm whale oil in lipstick and other solid products. (see also jojoba oil).
  • CULINARY USE
    The oil may be used in salad dressings with the nutritional advantage of having a low saturate content but a high total of unsaturates.
  • CAUTIONARY NOTES
    As far as is known, Camelina oil is non-irritant and non-sensitising.
  • Reference: Carrier Oils For Aromatherapy & Massage: len Price with Ian Smith & Shirley Price 

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