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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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Parminter, John
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Canadian Institute for Studies in Publishing Press 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jem-online.org/index.php/jem/article/view/615
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spelling 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
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