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for Friendly FireBefore the Wilderness: Environmental Management by Native Californians edited
by Thomas C. Blackburn and Kat Anderson, Menlo Park: Ballena Press,
1993
This book is a wide compilation of the breakthrough scholarship detailing how carefully and completely the Native Californians managed their ecosystem.
Enlightening Book on Indigenous Land Use Many of us have been given the impression that the indigenous people
of the Americas before white invasion lived wandering, nomadic lives
of fierce hunting with little if any organized manipulation of their
environment. This book corrects this impression with seasoned research.
Indigenous California is one of the most culturally and linguistically
diverse areas in the world. This work focuses on the ways the people
of the region helped sustain the land's yield for their own uses.
Henry T. Lewis's contribution focuses on controlled burn practices,
though the subject is included in several entries from other researchers.
Burns occurred in every environment, were seasonally timed, and helped
maintain a varied-age, mosaic landscape. Peri and Patterson and Ortiz
cover maintenance of plants for baskets. Helen McCarthy discusses
oak maintenance. Philip J. Wilke reports on bow stave extraction from
living junipers. Swezey and Heizer discuss management of anadramous
fish and also agriculture among the Paiute of Owens Valley, which
involved irrigation, planting of grasses, and burns. The editors have
done an excellent job at selecting the entries. All are fascinating
and enhance the reader's picture of the West Coast as it once was.
This reader from Texas wishes enough info was available on his region
to do a similar compilation. Combine this book with Leanne Hinton's
Flutes of Fire for a more complete
picture of the richness of West Coast culture and with Helena Norberg-Hodge's
Ancient Futures for an understanding of how indigenous wisdom
can be sustained to improve our current lives. Indigenous people still,
in California as elsewhere, face continued repression and this book
can give some idea of the worth of their cultures and the importance
of supporting their struggles. d.garrett@mail.utexas.edu from Austin, Texas, January 7, 1999 |
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