The exotic banana crop, though introduced over a few millennia ago as mentioned, became well rooted in the Great Lakes region which Simmonds (1966) regarded as a secondary diversity center for bananas. The indigenous banana farming among the Haya, in the form of an intensively tended home ...
welcomed over 700 participants from Indigenous communities through-out the world to the five day event. A concurrent Youth Summit component was run alongside the entire event.
Shipping Study: The Role of Shipping in the Introduction of Non-indigenous Aquatic Organisms to the Coastal Waters of the United States (Other than the Great Lakes) and an Analysis of Control Options. 来自 钛学术 喜欢 0 阅读量: 14 作者:...
The Appalachian Mountains divide the eastern seaboard from the Great Lakes and the grass- lands of the Midwest. The Mississippi–Missouri River, the world's fourth longest river system, runs mainly north-south through the heart of the country. The flat, fertile prairie land of the Great Plains...
Like so many indigenous cultures and languages, both the language and the religion of the Naxi people is fading. The Cultural Revolution from 1966-76 didn’t help things out. Very few young people after that period of time were really interested in preserving the Naxi culture. In 2004, only...
Edwards IV's book, "Indigenous Life around the Great Lakes: War, Climate, and Culture," which presents findings from the Center for Mid-western Archaeology's field school at Lake Koshkonong in Wisconsin. Edwards challenges conventional wisdom about the relationship between intensive agric...
"Contested Authority," uses the 1825 Prairie du Chien treaty council as a case study to examine the dynamics of power and authority of an Indigenous borderland located in the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century wild rice lakes and maple sugar forests of the western Great Lakes. This research ...
PS 82-123: Introducing non-indigenous species to the Great Lakes via ballast water: Quantifying vector strength and evaluating current management strategiesMark S. Minton
In the forty-year history of the SLIS, this is the first paper on Indigenous perspectives in the published outputs and is an important inaugural step for the SLIS. However, one singular paper does not represent the viewpoints of the many independent Indigenous communities of the Great Lakes ...
The Border Difference: The Anishinaabeg, Benevolence, and State Indigenous Policy in the Nineteenth-Century Great Lakes Basindoi:10.22439/ASCA.V50I1.5696Gray, Susan E.University Press of Southern DenmarkAmerican Studies in Scandinavia