Accounts of the adaptive responses of northern aboriginal peoples include examples of purposive modification and management of ecologically favorable areas to increase resource productivity. Practices include clearing of trees, burning of berry patches and construction of fish weirs. This paper exam...

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Main Authors: Sayles, Jesse S, Mulrennan, Monica E
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol15/iss4/art22/
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spelling ftjecolog:oai:.www.ecologyandsociety.org:article/3828 2023-05-15T18:43:25+02:00 Sayles, Jesse S Mulrennan, Monica E 2010-11-23 text/html application/pdf http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol15/iss4/art22/ en eng Resilience Alliance Ecology and Society; Vol. 15, No. 4 (2010) adaptation; Cree; environmental change; flexibility; indigenous resource use; goose hunting; James Bay; landscape modification; resilience; resistance Peer-Reviewed Reports 2010 ftjecolog 2019-04-09T11:22:41Z Accounts of the adaptive responses of northern aboriginal peoples include examples of purposive modification and management of ecologically favorable areas to increase resource productivity. Practices include clearing of trees, burning of berry patches and construction of fish weirs. This paper examines the adaptive capacity of the northern aboriginal community of Wemindji, east coast James Bay, in relation to long term landscape changes induced by coastal uplift processes. Associated changes are noticeable within a human lifetime and include the infilling of bays, the merger of islands with the mainland, as well as shifts in vegetative and wildlife communities. In response, generations of Cree hunters have actively modified the landscape using a variety of practices that include the construction of mud dykes and the cutting of tuuhiikaan, which are corridors in the coastal forest, to retain and enhance desirable conditions for goose hunting. We provide an account of the history, construction, and design of these features as well as the motivations and social learning that inform them. We reveal a complex and underappreciated dynamic between human resistance and adaptation to environmental change. While landscape modifications are motivated by a desire to increase resource productivity and predictability, they also reflect an intergenerational commitment to the maintenance of established hunting places as important connections with the past. Our findings support a revised perspective on aboriginal human agency in northern landscape modification and an enhanced role for aboriginal communities in adaptive planning for environmental change. Other/Unknown Material Wemindji James Bay Unknown Wemindji ENVELOPE(-78.816,-78.816,53.000,53.000)
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id ftjecolog
language English
topic adaptation; Cree; environmental change; flexibility; indigenous resource use; goose hunting; James Bay; landscape modification; resilience; resistance
spellingShingle adaptation; Cree; environmental change; flexibility; indigenous resource use; goose hunting; James Bay; landscape modification; resilience; resistance
Sayles, Jesse S
Mulrennan, Monica E
topic_facet adaptation; Cree; environmental change; flexibility; indigenous resource use; goose hunting; James Bay; landscape modification; resilience; resistance
description Accounts of the adaptive responses of northern aboriginal peoples include examples of purposive modification and management of ecologically favorable areas to increase resource productivity. Practices include clearing of trees, burning of berry patches and construction of fish weirs. This paper examines the adaptive capacity of the northern aboriginal community of Wemindji, east coast James Bay, in relation to long term landscape changes induced by coastal uplift processes. Associated changes are noticeable within a human lifetime and include the infilling of bays, the merger of islands with the mainland, as well as shifts in vegetative and wildlife communities. In response, generations of Cree hunters have actively modified the landscape using a variety of practices that include the construction of mud dykes and the cutting of tuuhiikaan, which are corridors in the coastal forest, to retain and enhance desirable conditions for goose hunting. We provide an account of the history, construction, and design of these features as well as the motivations and social learning that inform them. We reveal a complex and underappreciated dynamic between human resistance and adaptation to environmental change. While landscape modifications are motivated by a desire to increase resource productivity and predictability, they also reflect an intergenerational commitment to the maintenance of established hunting places as important connections with the past. Our findings support a revised perspective on aboriginal human agency in northern landscape modification and an enhanced role for aboriginal communities in adaptive planning for environmental change.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Sayles, Jesse S
Mulrennan, Monica E
author_facet Sayles, Jesse S
Mulrennan, Monica E
author_sort Sayles, Jesse S
publisher Resilience Alliance
publishDate 2010
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol15/iss4/art22/
long_lat ENVELOPE(-78.816,-78.816,53.000,53.000)
geographic Wemindji
geographic_facet Wemindji
genre Wemindji
James Bay
genre_facet Wemindji
James Bay
op_source Ecology and Society; Vol. 15, No. 4 (2010)
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