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wnylib

(21,335 posts)
Mon Mar 21, 2022, 06:50 AM Mar 2022

Indigenous forest management and fire control in California prior to European arrival

The indigenous tribes of California practiced forest management that not only aided them in creating pathways and habitats for preferred animals, but also prevented the kinds of large scale forest fires that occur with today's hands off natural approach.

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/03/220315141837.htm

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Indigenous forest management and fire control in California prior to European arrival (Original Post) wnylib Mar 2022 OP
So, I'm guessing...... MyOwnPeace Mar 2022 #1
Controlled burning. wnylib Mar 2022 #2
This paper is really a big deal. jeffreyi Mar 2022 #3
California is not the only place wnylib Mar 2022 #4
+1 jeffreyi Mar 2022 #5

jeffreyi

(1,938 posts)
3. This paper is really a big deal.
Mon Mar 21, 2022, 05:03 PM
Mar 2022

Being a certain resource agency retiree, I can assure you, this a turnaround. I know I have been turned around by a number of relatively recent articles and books about how the landscape worldwide has been shaped all along by humans. Should have seen it a long time ago, but was skeptical. It's all too obvious now.

wnylib

(21,335 posts)
4. California is not the only place
Mon Mar 21, 2022, 06:13 PM
Mar 2022

where this kind of human land management occurred in pre Columbian North America.

Several years ago as a volunteer on a small dig in National Forest land in northwestern PA, a forest ranger took us volunteers on a tour of the area while the archaeology group was getting set up. He showed us where the Seneca who had lived in the area planted trees along a river bank to prevent erosion. The waterways in North America were highways for the Native population, so they preserved them.

The Seneca and other tribal nations who lived in wooded areas used to use controlled burning of underbrush to eliminate habitats for vermin and other pests, create pathways for foot travel, and encourage habitats for the deer that they hunted. They also selectively chose different species of trees according to their purpose as canoes, firewood, house framing, etc., and according to size and age in order to encourage the growth of trees they relied on. In that way, they shaped the types of forests in their regions.

The land was not the "wild," untended wilderness that Europeans thought it was when they arrived.

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