13   Artículos

 
en línea
Daniel G. Cole and E. Richard Hart    
Indigenous maps are critical in understanding the historic and current land tenure of Indigenous groups. Furthermore, Indigenous claims to land can be seen in their connections via toponymy. European concepts of territory and political boundaries did not... ver más
Revista: ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information    Formato: Electrónico

 
en línea
Sims K. Lawson, Layla G. Sharp, Chelsea N. Powers, Robert L. McFeeters, Prabodh Satyal and William N. Setzer    
Helianthus species are North American members of the Asteraceae, several of which have been used as traditional medicines by Native Americans. The aerial parts of two cultivars of Helianthus annuus, ?Chianti? and ?Mammoth?, and wild-growing H. strumosus,... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences    Formato: Electrónico

 
en línea
Jonathan W. Long, Andrew Gray and Frank K. Lake    
Forest densification, wildfires, and disease can reduce the growth and survival of hardwood trees that are important for biological and cultural diversity within the Pacific Northwest of USA. Large, full-crowned hardwoods that produce fruit and that form... ver más
Revista: Forests    Formato: Electrónico

 
en línea
Karletta Chief, Alison Meadow and Kyle Whyte    
Indigenous peoples in North America have a long history of understanding their societies as having an intimate relationship with their physical environments. Their cultures, traditions, and identities are based on the ecosystems and sacred places that sh... ver más
Revista: Water    Formato: Electrónico

 
en línea
Esme Fuller Thomson, Amani Nuru-Jeter, Dawn Richardson, Ferrah Raza and Meredith Minkler    
The ?Hispanic Paradox? suggests that despite rates of poverty similar to African Americans, Hispanics have far better health and mortality outcomes, more comparable to non-Hispanic White Americans. Three prominent possible explanations for the Hispanic P... ver más

 
en línea
Yaoqi Zhang, Indrajit Majumdar and John Schelhas    
There is growing evidence suggesting that the United States? roots are not in a state of ?pristine? nature but rather in a ?human-modified landscape? over which Native people have since long exerted vast control and use. The longleaf pine is a typical wo... ver más
Revista: Sustainability    Formato: Electrónico

 
en línea
David O. Whitten    
The earliest European immigrants in America traveled on waterways and on pathways worn into the earth by animals and Native Americans. Once their communities began to thrive, settlers widened paths and cleared new roads and streets then began experimenti... ver más
Revista: Essays in Economic and Business History    Formato: Electrónico

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