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Indians, fire, and the land in the Pacific Northwest  Cover Image Book Book

Indians, fire, and the land in the Pacific Northwest

Summary: Instead of discovering a land blanketed by dense forests, early explorers of the Pacific Northwest encountered a varied landscape including open woods, meadows, and prairies. Far from a pristine wilderness, much of the Northwest was actively managed and shaped by the hands of its Native American inhabitants. Their primary tool was fire. This volume takes an interdisciplinary approach to one of the most important issues concerning Native Americans and their relationship to the land. Over more than 10,000 years, Native Americans in the Northwest learned the intricacies of their local environments and how to use fire to create desired effects, mostly in the quest for food. Drawing on historical journals, Native American informants, and ethnobotanical and forestry studies, this book's contributors describe local patterns of fire use in eight ecoregions, representing all parts of the Native Northwest, from southwest Oregon to British Columbia and from Puget Sound to the Northern Rockies. Their essays provide glimpses into a unique understanding of the environment, one that draws on traditional ecological knowledge. Together, these writings also offer historical perspective on the contemporary debate over "prescribed burning" and management of public lands.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780870711480 (softcover)
  • Physical Description: print
    xvii, 329 pages : illustrations, maps ; 23 cm
  • Edition: Updated edition.
  • Publisher: Corvallis, Oregon : Oregon State University Press, 2021.

Content descriptions

Bibliography, etc. Note: Includes bibliographical references and index.
Formatted Contents Note: Foreword / Frank Kanawha Lake -- Introduction / Robert Boyd -- Aboriginal control of huckleberry yield in the Northwest / David French -- Indian land use and environmental change : Island County, Washington : a case study / Richard White -- Indian fires in the northern Rockies : ethnohistory and ecology / Stephen Barrett and Stephen Arno -- The Klikitat Trail of south-central Washington : a reconstruction of seasonally used resource sites / Helen H. Norton, Robert Boyd, and Eugene Hunn -- Strategies of Indian burning in the Willamette Valley / Robert Boyd -- An ecological history of old prairie areas in southwestern Washington / Estella B. Leopold and Robert Boyd -- Yards, corridors, and mosaics : how to burn a boreal forest / Henry T. Lewis and Theresa A. Ferguson -- "Time to burn" : traditional use of fire to enhance resource production by aboriginal peoples in British Columbia / Nancy J. Turner -- Landscape and environment : ecological change in the intermontane Northwest / William G. Robbins -- Aboriginal burning for vegetation management in northwest British Columbia / Leslie Main Johnson -- Burning for a "fine and beautiful open country" : native uses of fire in southwestern Oregon / Jeff LaLands and Reg Pullen -- Proto-historical and historical Spokan prescribed burning and stewardship of resource areas / John Ross -- Conclusion : ecological lessons from northwest Native Americans / Robert Boyd -- Epilogue : twenty-two years later : new directions and a literature review of research on Pacific Northwest Native American use of fire / Robert Boyd.
Subject: Indigenous peoples -- Agriculture -- Northwest, Pacific
Indigenous peoples -- Northwest, Pacific -- Social life and customs
Human ecology -- Northwest, Pacific
Fire ecology -- Northwest, Pacific
Prescribed burning -- Northwest, Pacific
Northwest, Pacific -- Social life and customs
Indigenous peoples -- North America
Topic Heading: Indigenous.
First Nations.

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at University College of the North Libraries.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
The Pas Campus Library E 78 .N77 I53 2021 (Text) 58500000805085 Stacks Volume hold Available -

ROBERT T. BOYD, affiliated faculty in the Department of Anthropology, Portland State University, is author of The Coming of the Spirit of Pestilence: Introduced Diseases and Population Decline among Northwest Coast Indians, 1774–1874 and coeditor of Chinookan Peoples of the Lower Columbia. He lives in Portland, Oregon

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