This chapter, included in Chinookan Peoples of the Lower Columbia, published by the University of Washington Press in 2013, explores the aboriginal fisheries of the Lower Columbia River. The authors reviewed ethnohistorical accounts and studies of archaeological sites to create a complex picture of Columbia River fisheries that challenges the prevailing view among anthropologists that salmon was the primary and predominant fishery among Chinookan peoples. The authors show that 19th century Native fishers targeted virtually all native fish species in the Lower Columbia River, and employed a wide range of strategies and tactics to acquire and process fish
Both the use of and jurisdiction over fisheries resources is an important issue for many First Nat...
Verkefnið er lokað til 30.06.2021.Currently in Canada, colonial fisheries management practices are d...
This chapter, included in Chinookan Peoples of the Lower Columbia, published by the University of Wa...
The role of fish in the Native American economy of the lower Columbia River has never been considere...
This chapter, included in Chinookan Peoples of the Lower Columbia, published by the University of Wa...
Three generations ago the Upper Columbia River salmon fishery was eradicated by the construction of ...
Abstract Approved: The presence and significance of salmon for prehis-toric and aboriginal people of...
Riverine ecosystems have been exploited in North America by indigenous people since the Pleistocene ...
America\u27s western rivers are under assault, as development, pollution, climate change, and invasi...
Villages were the center of Chinookan life, filling the role that tribes did for Native people in ot...
This project investigates the potential of Indigenous fishing in the Columbia River Basin to challen...
Chinook Indians in canoes on the Columbia River, Washington or Oregon.Edward S. Curtis Collection.Cu...
Recognition and use of indigenous knowledge in resource management can increase the information ava...
Both the use of and jurisdiction over fisheries resources is an important issue for many First Nat...
The exploitation of salmon resources was once central to the economic life of the Northwest Coast. T...
Both the use of and jurisdiction over fisheries resources is an important issue for many First Nat...
Verkefnið er lokað til 30.06.2021.Currently in Canada, colonial fisheries management practices are d...
This chapter, included in Chinookan Peoples of the Lower Columbia, published by the University of Wa...
The role of fish in the Native American economy of the lower Columbia River has never been considere...
This chapter, included in Chinookan Peoples of the Lower Columbia, published by the University of Wa...
Three generations ago the Upper Columbia River salmon fishery was eradicated by the construction of ...
Abstract Approved: The presence and significance of salmon for prehis-toric and aboriginal people of...
Riverine ecosystems have been exploited in North America by indigenous people since the Pleistocene ...
America\u27s western rivers are under assault, as development, pollution, climate change, and invasi...
Villages were the center of Chinookan life, filling the role that tribes did for Native people in ot...
This project investigates the potential of Indigenous fishing in the Columbia River Basin to challen...
Chinook Indians in canoes on the Columbia River, Washington or Oregon.Edward S. Curtis Collection.Cu...
Recognition and use of indigenous knowledge in resource management can increase the information ava...
Both the use of and jurisdiction over fisheries resources is an important issue for many First Nat...
The exploitation of salmon resources was once central to the economic life of the Northwest Coast. T...
Both the use of and jurisdiction over fisheries resources is an important issue for many First Nat...
Verkefnið er lokað til 30.06.2021.Currently in Canada, colonial fisheries management practices are d...
This chapter, included in Chinookan Peoples of the Lower Columbia, published by the University of Wa...