Fire was arguably the most important forest and rangeland disturbance process in the Inland Northwest United States for millennia. Prior to the Lewis and Clark expedition, fire regimes ranged from high-severity with return intervals of 1 to 5 centuries, to low-severity with fire-free periods lasting 3 decades or less. Indoamerican burning contributed to the fire ecology of grasslands and lower and mid-montane dry forests, especially where ponderosa pine was the dominant overstory species, but the extent of this contribution is difficult to quantify. Two centuries of settlement, exploitation, management, and climate variation have transformed the fire regimes, vegetation and fuel patterns, and overall functionality of these forests. We prese...
Graduation date: 1980The history of fire between 1850 and 1977 in a portion of the\ud Willamette Nat...
The relationship between people and wildfire has always been paradoxical: fire is an essential ecolo...
Environmental change and human activity have been the driving forces of fire activity in Pacific Nor...
Dendroecological, documentary, and ethnoecological evidence were combined to provide an integrated u...
Ecological and historical data are combined in assessing the influence of cultural broadcast burning...
Study of long-term fire histories (from fire scars on old trees) helps determine if severe fires wer...
Graduation date: 1978Presentation date: 1977-09-19Ecological and historical information are combined...
Graduation date: 2004The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship between land\ud manage...
Instead of discovering a land blanketed by dense forests, early explorers of the Pacific Northwest e...
The purpose of this study was to reconstruct historical fire regimes along an elevation and vegetati...
Understanding the causes and consequences of wildfires in forests of the western United States requi...
Graduation date: 2006Two research questions are posed: (1) How have ecosystem conditions\ud changed ...
It is now widely acknowledged that frequent low-intensity fires once structured many western forests...
It is now widely acknowledged that frequent low-intensity fires once structured many western forests...
Implementation of wildfire- and climate-adaptation strategies in seasonally dry forests of western N...
Graduation date: 1980The history of fire between 1850 and 1977 in a portion of the\ud Willamette Nat...
The relationship between people and wildfire has always been paradoxical: fire is an essential ecolo...
Environmental change and human activity have been the driving forces of fire activity in Pacific Nor...
Dendroecological, documentary, and ethnoecological evidence were combined to provide an integrated u...
Ecological and historical data are combined in assessing the influence of cultural broadcast burning...
Study of long-term fire histories (from fire scars on old trees) helps determine if severe fires wer...
Graduation date: 1978Presentation date: 1977-09-19Ecological and historical information are combined...
Graduation date: 2004The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship between land\ud manage...
Instead of discovering a land blanketed by dense forests, early explorers of the Pacific Northwest e...
The purpose of this study was to reconstruct historical fire regimes along an elevation and vegetati...
Understanding the causes and consequences of wildfires in forests of the western United States requi...
Graduation date: 2006Two research questions are posed: (1) How have ecosystem conditions\ud changed ...
It is now widely acknowledged that frequent low-intensity fires once structured many western forests...
It is now widely acknowledged that frequent low-intensity fires once structured many western forests...
Implementation of wildfire- and climate-adaptation strategies in seasonally dry forests of western N...
Graduation date: 1980The history of fire between 1850 and 1977 in a portion of the\ud Willamette Nat...
The relationship between people and wildfire has always been paradoxical: fire is an essential ecolo...
Environmental change and human activity have been the driving forces of fire activity in Pacific Nor...