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Keeping It Living - Traditions of Plant Use and Cultivation on the Northwest Coast of North America (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,141
Discovery Miles 31 410
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Keeping It Living - Traditions of Plant Use and Cultivation on the Northwest Coast of North America (Hardcover)
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The European explorers who first visited the Northwest Coast of
North America assumed that the entire region was virtually
untouched wilderness whose occupants used the land only minimally,
hunting and gathering shoots, roots, and berries that were
peripheral to a diet and culture focused on salmon. Colonizers who
followed the explorers used these claims to justify the
displacement of Native groups from their lands. Scholars now
understand, however, that Northwest Coast peoples were actively
cultivating plants well before their first contact with Europeans.
This book is the first comprehensive overview of how Northwest
Coast Native Americans managed the landscape and cared for the
plant communities on which they depended. Bringing together some of
the world's most prominent specialists on Northwest Coast cultures,
Keeping It Living tells the story of traditional plant cultivation
practices found from the Oregon coast to Southeast Alaska. It
explores tobacco gardens among the Haida and Tlingit, managed camas
plots among the Coast Salish of Puget Sound and the Strait of
Georgia, estuarine root gardens along the central coast of British
Columbia, wapato maintenance on the Columbia and Fraser Rivers, and
tended berry plots up and down the entire coast. With contributions
from ethnobotanists, archaeologists, anthropologists, geographers,
ecologists, and Native American scholars and elders, Keeping It
Living documents practices, many unknown to European peoples, that
involve manipulating plants as well as their environments in ways
that enhanced culturally preferred plants and plant communities. It
describes how indigenous peoples of this region used and cared for
over 300 different species of plants, from the lofty red cedar to
diminutive plants of backwater bogs.
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