Graduation date: 2004The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship between land\ud management practices of Indian communities prior to contact with\ud Europeans and the nature or character of subsequent catastrophic forest\ud fires in the Oregon Coast Range. The research focus is spatial and\ud temporal patterns of Indian burning across the landscape from 1491 until\ud 1848, and corresponding patterns of catastrophic fire events from 1849\ud until 1951. Archival and anthropological research methods were used to\ud obtain early surveys, maps, drawings, photographs, interviews, Geographic\ud Information Systems (GIS) inventories, eyewitness accounts and other\ud sources of evidence that document fire history. Data were tabulated,\u...
Environmental change and human activity have been the driving forces of fire activity in Pacific Nor...
We examined traditional knowledge of fire use by the Ichishikin (Sahaptin), Kitsht Wasco (Wasco), an...
Prescribed burning of the countryside was widely practiced by Native Californians. The application o...
Graduation date: 2006Two research questions are posed: (1) How have ecosystem conditions\ud changed ...
Graduation date: 1980The history of fire between 1850 and 1977 in a portion of the\ud Willamette Nat...
This chapter, included in Indians, Fire and the Land in the Pacific Northwest, published by the Oreg...
Ecological and historical data are combined in assessing the influence of cultural broadcast burning...
Historical records document the use of fire by Native Americans to maintain low-elevation fire-adapt...
Instead of discovering a land blanketed by dense forests, early explorers of the Pacific Northwest e...
Fire history from years 1150 to 1985 was reconstructed by analyzing forest stands in two 1940-hectar...
Graduation date: 2005A crossdated fire history was reconstructed for a 1562 km2 area in the southern...
Graduation date: 1978Presentation date: 1977-09-19Ecological and historical information are combined...
This study brought together a team of ecologists, archaeologists, environmental historians, indigeno...
Graduation date: 2008Presentation date: 2007-05-10The use of Native American fire regimes evolved in...
Fire was arguably the most important forest and rangeland disturbance process in the Inland Northwes...
Environmental change and human activity have been the driving forces of fire activity in Pacific Nor...
We examined traditional knowledge of fire use by the Ichishikin (Sahaptin), Kitsht Wasco (Wasco), an...
Prescribed burning of the countryside was widely practiced by Native Californians. The application o...
Graduation date: 2006Two research questions are posed: (1) How have ecosystem conditions\ud changed ...
Graduation date: 1980The history of fire between 1850 and 1977 in a portion of the\ud Willamette Nat...
This chapter, included in Indians, Fire and the Land in the Pacific Northwest, published by the Oreg...
Ecological and historical data are combined in assessing the influence of cultural broadcast burning...
Historical records document the use of fire by Native Americans to maintain low-elevation fire-adapt...
Instead of discovering a land blanketed by dense forests, early explorers of the Pacific Northwest e...
Fire history from years 1150 to 1985 was reconstructed by analyzing forest stands in two 1940-hectar...
Graduation date: 2005A crossdated fire history was reconstructed for a 1562 km2 area in the southern...
Graduation date: 1978Presentation date: 1977-09-19Ecological and historical information are combined...
This study brought together a team of ecologists, archaeologists, environmental historians, indigeno...
Graduation date: 2008Presentation date: 2007-05-10The use of Native American fire regimes evolved in...
Fire was arguably the most important forest and rangeland disturbance process in the Inland Northwes...
Environmental change and human activity have been the driving forces of fire activity in Pacific Nor...
We examined traditional knowledge of fire use by the Ichishikin (Sahaptin), Kitsht Wasco (Wasco), an...
Prescribed burning of the countryside was widely practiced by Native Californians. The application o...