This paper discusses the history of Native Americans at Celilo Falls and in the Dalles Area, as well as the impact of white settlers moving there. It focuses on the impact this had on the river itself, through fisheries and various damming projects, and how it affected the lives of the various tribes surrounding the river. It examines the impacts of damming the Columbia River at various points along the river, and what that did to life for the River Tribes. The thesis of this paper is that the flooding of Celilo Falls by the Dalles Dam was a final effect of the erasure and dismissal of the validity of Native American culture throughout the 19th and 20th centuries
This poster uses the existence of a possible fish weir feature in a backwater lake on Sauvie Island ...
For roughly 15,000 years, the area of the St. Mary's River known as Baawitigong (rapids) has been ho...
In this study, I examine the history of colonial control, domination, and change that began in the I...
Provides an historical overview of the economic and social importance of Celilo Falls of the Columbi...
On March 10, 1957, the United States Army Corps of Engineers completed The Dalles Dam and inundated ...
For 11,000 years, Celilo Falls was the most important salmon fishery and trading locale for Indigeno...
For hundreds of years Celilo Falls on the Columbia River had been the most important Indian fishing ...
Photograph of Celilo Falls of the Columbia River at The Dalles, Oregon, [s.d.]. The waterfalls are i...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2013Examination of how Indigenous People have been forced ...
The Missoula Floods occurred approximately fifteen thousand to thirteen thousand years ago during th...
This paper utilizes oral history interviews, treaties, governmental, international, and scientific r...
Native Americans spear and net salmon at Celilo Falls on the Columbia River as tourists look onhttps...
Graduation date: 1980Prior to advent of Europeans in the Pacific Northwest,\ud the Middle Columbia R...
9 p. Term paper produced for HC 441: Science Colloquium: Willamette River Environmental Health, Robe...
Graduation date: 2009Several reports related to dams and dam removal have been released this\ud deca...
This poster uses the existence of a possible fish weir feature in a backwater lake on Sauvie Island ...
For roughly 15,000 years, the area of the St. Mary's River known as Baawitigong (rapids) has been ho...
In this study, I examine the history of colonial control, domination, and change that began in the I...
Provides an historical overview of the economic and social importance of Celilo Falls of the Columbi...
On March 10, 1957, the United States Army Corps of Engineers completed The Dalles Dam and inundated ...
For 11,000 years, Celilo Falls was the most important salmon fishery and trading locale for Indigeno...
For hundreds of years Celilo Falls on the Columbia River had been the most important Indian fishing ...
Photograph of Celilo Falls of the Columbia River at The Dalles, Oregon, [s.d.]. The waterfalls are i...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2013Examination of how Indigenous People have been forced ...
The Missoula Floods occurred approximately fifteen thousand to thirteen thousand years ago during th...
This paper utilizes oral history interviews, treaties, governmental, international, and scientific r...
Native Americans spear and net salmon at Celilo Falls on the Columbia River as tourists look onhttps...
Graduation date: 1980Prior to advent of Europeans in the Pacific Northwest,\ud the Middle Columbia R...
9 p. Term paper produced for HC 441: Science Colloquium: Willamette River Environmental Health, Robe...
Graduation date: 2009Several reports related to dams and dam removal have been released this\ud deca...
This poster uses the existence of a possible fish weir feature in a backwater lake on Sauvie Island ...
For roughly 15,000 years, the area of the St. Mary's River known as Baawitigong (rapids) has been ho...
In this study, I examine the history of colonial control, domination, and change that began in the I...