First Nations' Prescribed Burning in British Columbia
The Indigenous peoples of British Columbia (BC) have a long and deep tradition of cultural burning. It was an important component of many of BC’s ecosystems until colonial authorities systematically discouraged the practice from the 1870s onwards. Eventually the beneficial role of fire was recognize...
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Canadian Institute for Studies in Publishing Press
2023
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ftjemforrex:oai:jem-online.org:article/615 2023-12-10T09:48:36+01:00 First Nations' Prescribed Burning in British Columbia Parminter, John 2023-11-06 application/pdf http://jem-online.org/index.php/jem/article/view/615 eng eng Canadian Institute for Studies in Publishing Press http://jem-online.org/index.php/jem/article/view/615/533 http://jem-online.org/index.php/jem/article/view/615 Copyright (c) 2023 Journal of Ecosystems and Management Journal of Ecosystems and Management; Vol. 23 No. 1 (2023); 7 pp 1488-4674 1488-4666 First Nations Cultural Burning info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer-reviewed Article 2023 ftjemforrex 2023-11-12T18:41:14Z The Indigenous peoples of British Columbia (BC) have a long and deep tradition of cultural burning. It was an important component of many of BC’s ecosystems until colonial authorities systematically discouraged the practice from the 1870s onwards. Eventually the beneficial role of fire was recognized, particularly in dry interior (NDT 4) ecosystems. To help validate those traditional practices, this article draws on settler and Indigenous accounts of First Nations cultural burning in BC. Article in Journal/Newspaper First Nations Journal of Ecosystems and Management (JEM) |
institution |
Open Polar |
collection |
Journal of Ecosystems and Management (JEM) |
op_collection_id |
ftjemforrex |
language |
English |
topic |
First Nations Cultural Burning |
spellingShingle |
First Nations Cultural Burning Parminter, John First Nations' Prescribed Burning in British Columbia |
topic_facet |
First Nations Cultural Burning |
description |
The Indigenous peoples of British Columbia (BC) have a long and deep tradition of cultural burning. It was an important component of many of BC’s ecosystems until colonial authorities systematically discouraged the practice from the 1870s onwards. Eventually the beneficial role of fire was recognized, particularly in dry interior (NDT 4) ecosystems. To help validate those traditional practices, this article draws on settler and Indigenous accounts of First Nations cultural burning in BC. |
format |
Article in Journal/Newspaper |
author |
Parminter, John |
author_facet |
Parminter, John |
author_sort |
Parminter, John |
title |
First Nations' Prescribed Burning in British Columbia |
title_short |
First Nations' Prescribed Burning in British Columbia |
title_full |
First Nations' Prescribed Burning in British Columbia |
title_fullStr |
First Nations' Prescribed Burning in British Columbia |
title_full_unstemmed |
First Nations' Prescribed Burning in British Columbia |
title_sort |
first nations' prescribed burning in british columbia |
publisher |
Canadian Institute for Studies in Publishing Press |
publishDate |
2023 |
url |
http://jem-online.org/index.php/jem/article/view/615 |
genre |
First Nations |
genre_facet |
First Nations |
op_source |
Journal of Ecosystems and Management; Vol. 23 No. 1 (2023); 7 pp 1488-4674 1488-4666 |
op_relation |
http://jem-online.org/index.php/jem/article/view/615/533 http://jem-online.org/index.php/jem/article/view/615 |
op_rights |
Copyright (c) 2023 Journal of Ecosystems and Management |
_version_ |
1784892665185173504 |