Thesis (Ph.D.), Department of Anthropology, Washington State UniversityAt European contact, indigenous societies of the Northwest Coast employed complex rules governing land tenure and resource ownership, especially as such rules related to food production. While the intensive exploitation of salmon and other marine resources was a critical element of Northwest Coast economies for millennia, I argue that plants were also intensified and actively managed, but in a different way than marine resources. This dissertation investigates resource production by considering investment in terrestrial landscapes and floral resources by the precontact Coast Salish of the Gulf of Georgia during the last 5,000 years. I argue that understanding changes in ...
Prescribed burning of the countryside was widely practiced by Native Californians. The application o...
This chapter, included in Indians, Fire and the Land in the Pacific Northwest, published by the Oreg...
xvii, 382 p. : ill. (some col.), maps. A print copy of this thesis is available through the UO Libr...
This study investigated the role of human land use and climate as drivers of the historical fire reg...
This study investigated the role of human land use and climate as drivers of the historical fire reg...
Instead of discovering a land blanketed by dense forests, early explorers of the Pacific Northwest e...
Graduation date: 2006Two research questions are posed: (1) How have ecosystem conditions\ud changed ...
This dissertation examines multiple scales of Indigenous history on the Northwest Coast from the dis...
This dissertation examines multiple scales of Indigenous history on the Northwest Coast from the dis...
This dissertation explores the intersections of past human settlement and the dynamism of coastal la...
Fire, people, and landscapes have dynamically coexisted through time in fire-dependent social-ecolog...
Ecological and historical data are combined in assessing the influence of cultural broadcast burning...
The Northwest Coast region of North America has long been reported as relying heavily on a marine su...
This thesis utilizes high resolution charcoal analysis and charcoal morphology to reconstruct fire h...
Were the ancient Coast Salish farmers? Conventional anthropological wisdom asserts that the ethnogra...
Prescribed burning of the countryside was widely practiced by Native Californians. The application o...
This chapter, included in Indians, Fire and the Land in the Pacific Northwest, published by the Oreg...
xvii, 382 p. : ill. (some col.), maps. A print copy of this thesis is available through the UO Libr...
This study investigated the role of human land use and climate as drivers of the historical fire reg...
This study investigated the role of human land use and climate as drivers of the historical fire reg...
Instead of discovering a land blanketed by dense forests, early explorers of the Pacific Northwest e...
Graduation date: 2006Two research questions are posed: (1) How have ecosystem conditions\ud changed ...
This dissertation examines multiple scales of Indigenous history on the Northwest Coast from the dis...
This dissertation examines multiple scales of Indigenous history on the Northwest Coast from the dis...
This dissertation explores the intersections of past human settlement and the dynamism of coastal la...
Fire, people, and landscapes have dynamically coexisted through time in fire-dependent social-ecolog...
Ecological and historical data are combined in assessing the influence of cultural broadcast burning...
The Northwest Coast region of North America has long been reported as relying heavily on a marine su...
This thesis utilizes high resolution charcoal analysis and charcoal morphology to reconstruct fire h...
Were the ancient Coast Salish farmers? Conventional anthropological wisdom asserts that the ethnogra...
Prescribed burning of the countryside was widely practiced by Native Californians. The application o...
This chapter, included in Indians, Fire and the Land in the Pacific Northwest, published by the Oreg...
xvii, 382 p. : ill. (some col.), maps. A print copy of this thesis is available through the UO Libr...