In the 16th century, North America (Turtle Island) was home to 25 to 30 million buffalo roaming freely on the Great Plains, but by the end of the late 19th century only a few hundred remained. After European contact, a combination of ecological changes, species pressure and disease created tension between the buffalo herds and threatened their survival. However, the dramatic decrease associated with the buffalo is ultimately attributed to human agency. Unofficial military policy, sport-hunting, and a capitalistic hunger for resources brought the once plentiful herds to near extinction in just a few decades. The decimation of the buffalo was encouraged by both the American and Canadian governments because it was viewed as a solution to the “...
By 1879 the vast buffalo herds were all but gone from the Great Plains. Many of the remaining animal...
This paper outlines in some detail the population dynamics of a large, free-ranging herd of Bison in...
This paper analyzes the reactions of the United States of America in the late 19th century toward th...
This inquiry seeks to establish that innovations in tanning technology advanced by Europeans in the ...
The eradication of the vast bison herds from the North American Great Plains is one of the oldest to...
The transformation of the Great Plains through the introduction of new plants and animals and the re...
Buffalo consists of twelve articles written by Canadian authors of diverse backgrounds. Their effort...
Bison made their home on the Southern Plains for millennia. However, their migratory patterns began ...
Over the last 150 years, the North American Great Plains, once a region of native grasses and wildli...
Early bison originated in Asia and migrated to North America by means of the Bering Land Bridge, whi...
This long-form journalistic story and photo essay is about the Blackfoot Tribes in the United States...
It is believed that buffalo, or bison, crossed over a land bridge that once connected the Asian and ...
Charles and Mollie Goodnight, C. J. Buffalo Jones, Frederick and Mary Dupuis, and Samuel Walking C...
When the United States purchased the Louisiana Territory from France in 1803, it acquired an abundan...
A combination of factors culminated in the near demise of the North American bison in the late 19th ...
By 1879 the vast buffalo herds were all but gone from the Great Plains. Many of the remaining animal...
This paper outlines in some detail the population dynamics of a large, free-ranging herd of Bison in...
This paper analyzes the reactions of the United States of America in the late 19th century toward th...
This inquiry seeks to establish that innovations in tanning technology advanced by Europeans in the ...
The eradication of the vast bison herds from the North American Great Plains is one of the oldest to...
The transformation of the Great Plains through the introduction of new plants and animals and the re...
Buffalo consists of twelve articles written by Canadian authors of diverse backgrounds. Their effort...
Bison made their home on the Southern Plains for millennia. However, their migratory patterns began ...
Over the last 150 years, the North American Great Plains, once a region of native grasses and wildli...
Early bison originated in Asia and migrated to North America by means of the Bering Land Bridge, whi...
This long-form journalistic story and photo essay is about the Blackfoot Tribes in the United States...
It is believed that buffalo, or bison, crossed over a land bridge that once connected the Asian and ...
Charles and Mollie Goodnight, C. J. Buffalo Jones, Frederick and Mary Dupuis, and Samuel Walking C...
When the United States purchased the Louisiana Territory from France in 1803, it acquired an abundan...
A combination of factors culminated in the near demise of the North American bison in the late 19th ...
By 1879 the vast buffalo herds were all but gone from the Great Plains. Many of the remaining animal...
This paper outlines in some detail the population dynamics of a large, free-ranging herd of Bison in...
This paper analyzes the reactions of the United States of America in the late 19th century toward th...