Examines the beauty, history, and controversy of Voyageurs National
Park.
Over 250,000 people visit Minnesota's only national park each
year. This popularity raises crucial questions: Can timberwolves
thrive amid snowmobiles and jet-skis? Can the thin layer of fragile
soil atop the Precambrian shield, the oldest exposed rock on earth,
survive the feet of campers? Voyageur Country explores these
quandaries and presents the only complete history of this
environmentally important region.
Voyageur Country describes the environmental significance of the
park, beginning with its geologic and glacial history and
continuing through current flora and fauna. Treuer then examines
human influences on the land, including those of the Ojibwe
Indians, French voyageurs, lumber barons, and wilderness advocates.
The birth of the modern incarnation of Voyageurs as a national park
is detailed, with accounts of the contributions of Sigurd Olson and
other conservationists.
The first paperback edition of this modern classic includes an
updated preface and chronology. Voyageur Country is an important
launching point for considering the policy that guides our
relationship with the land.
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