Contents
Foreword | Frank Kanawha Lake
Introduction | Robert T. Boyd
Aboriginal Control of Huckleberry Yield in the Northwest | David French
Indian Land Use and Environmental Change: Island County, Washington: A Case Study | Richard White
Indian Fires in the Northern Rockies: Ethnohistory and Ecology | Stephen Barrett and Stephen F. Arno
The Klikitat Trail of South-central Washington: A Reconstruction of Seasonally Used Resource Sites | Helen H. Norton, Robert T. Boyd, and Eugene Hunn
Strategies of Indian Burning in the Willamette Valley | Robert T. Boyd
An Ecological History of Old Prairie Areas in Southwestern Washington | Estella B. Leopold and Robert T. Boyd
Yards, Corridors, and Mosaics: How to Burn a Boreal Forest | Henry T. Lewis and Theresa A. Ferguson
“Time to Burn”: Traditional Use of Fire to Enhance Resource Production by Aboriginal Peoples in British Columbia | Nancy J. Turner
Landscape and Environment: Ecological Change in the Intermontane Northwest | William G. Robbins
Aboriginal Burning for Vegetation Management in Northwest British Columbia | Leslie Main Johnson
Burning for a “Fine and Beautiful Open Country”: Native Uses of Fire in Southwestern Oregon | Jeff LaLande and Reg Pullen
Proto-historical and Historical Spokan Prescribed Burning and Stewardship of Resource Areas | John Alan Ross
Conclusion: Ecological Lessons from Northwest Native Americans | Robert T. Boyd
Epilogue: Twenty-two Years Later: New Directions and a Literature Review of Research on Pacific Northwest Native American Use of Fire | Robert T. Boyd
Contributors
Index