25 pagesThe exceptional biological diversity of the mid-Klamath River region of northern California has emerged in conjunction with sophisticated Karuk land management practices, including the regulation of the forest and fisheries through ceremony and the use of fire. Over three quarters of Karuk traditional food and cultural use species are enhanced by fire. Fire is also central to cultural and spiritual practices. Land management techniques since the 1900s have emphasized fire suppression and the “exclusion” of wildfire from the landscape. This paper uses data from interviews, surveys and other documents to describe the social impacts of fire exclusion for Karuk tribal members. The exclusion of fire from the ecosystem has a host ...
Graduation date: 2006Two research questions are posed: (1) How have ecosystem conditions\ud changed ...
Graduation date: 2004The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship between land\ud manage...
Indigenous peoples and the roles we play in mitigating climate change are necessary in public educat...
The exceptional biological diversity of the mid-Klamath River region of northern California has emer...
Graduation date: 2008Presentation date: 2007-05-10The use of Native American fire regimes evolved in...
Lecture delivered at Humboldt State University on March 13, 2014 by Ron Reed and Kari Norgarrd. Part...
Prescribed burning of the countryside was widely practiced by Native Californians. The application o...
Prescribed burning by Indigenous people was once ubiquitous throughout California. Settler coloniali...
Graduation date: 2006This thesis explores the complexity of relationships between communities and th...
Ecological and historical data are combined in assessing the influence of cultural broadcast burning...
After a century of fire suppression and accumulating fuel loads in North American forests, prescribe...
These reports summarize workshops describing fire effects on the ecology and people of the Koyukon R...
Instead of discovering a land blanketed by dense forests, early explorers of the Pacific Northwest e...
This chapter, included in Indians, Fire and the Land in the Pacific Northwest, published by the Oreg...
Hunter-gatherer peoples have utilized fire for a variety of reasons. The objective of this study was...
Graduation date: 2006Two research questions are posed: (1) How have ecosystem conditions\ud changed ...
Graduation date: 2004The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship between land\ud manage...
Indigenous peoples and the roles we play in mitigating climate change are necessary in public educat...
The exceptional biological diversity of the mid-Klamath River region of northern California has emer...
Graduation date: 2008Presentation date: 2007-05-10The use of Native American fire regimes evolved in...
Lecture delivered at Humboldt State University on March 13, 2014 by Ron Reed and Kari Norgarrd. Part...
Prescribed burning of the countryside was widely practiced by Native Californians. The application o...
Prescribed burning by Indigenous people was once ubiquitous throughout California. Settler coloniali...
Graduation date: 2006This thesis explores the complexity of relationships between communities and th...
Ecological and historical data are combined in assessing the influence of cultural broadcast burning...
After a century of fire suppression and accumulating fuel loads in North American forests, prescribe...
These reports summarize workshops describing fire effects on the ecology and people of the Koyukon R...
Instead of discovering a land blanketed by dense forests, early explorers of the Pacific Northwest e...
This chapter, included in Indians, Fire and the Land in the Pacific Northwest, published by the Oreg...
Hunter-gatherer peoples have utilized fire for a variety of reasons. The objective of this study was...
Graduation date: 2006Two research questions are posed: (1) How have ecosystem conditions\ud changed ...
Graduation date: 2004The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship between land\ud manage...
Indigenous peoples and the roles we play in mitigating climate change are necessary in public educat...