South Umpqua River

REFERENCES

View of Roseburg and the South Umpqua River, Douglas County, Oregon, ca. 1883 (Walling 1884: 408).


South Umpqua River General Land Office (GLO) Public Land Survey (PLS) Field Note References.

Agee, James K. 1993. Fire Ecology of Pacific Northwest Forests. Island Press, Washington, DC: 493 pp.

Anderson, Kat 2005. Tending the Wild: Native American Knowledge and the Management of California’s Natural Resources. University of California Press, Berkeley, California: 526 pp.

Arnst, Albert 2000 (1985). We Climbed the Highest Mountains. Originally published by Fernhopper Press, Corvallis, Oregon. Reprinted with new Foreword and Afterword by Robe Hoeye and Carrol Neuhart-Hooeye 2000, by Iamwho.com Publishing, Wilsonville, Oregon: 30 pp. (PDF)

Barnard, Jeff 2010. “Wolf Sightings on Rise in Cascades,” The Register-Guard, Eugene, Oregon (January 16). (PDF)

Bean, William T. and Eric W. Sanderson 2008. “Using a Spatially Explicit Ecological Model to Test Scenarios of Fire Use by Native Americans: An Example from the Harlem Plains, New York, NY,” IN: Ecological Modeling, Vol. 211: 301-308. (PDF)

Beckham, Stephen Dow 1986. Land of the Umpqua: A History of Douglas County, Oregon. Douglas County Commissioners, Roseburg, Oregon: 285 pp.

Berreman, Joel V. 1937. Tribal Distribution in Oregon. Memoirs of the American Anthropological Association No. 47, American Anthropological Association, Menasha, Wisconsin: 67 pp.

Bourdo, Eric A. 1956. "A Review of the General Land Office Survey and of its Use in Quantitative Studies of Former Forests," Ecology, Vol. 37, No. 4: 754-768.

Boyd, Robert 1999a. The Coming of the Spirit of Pestilence. University of Washington Press, Seattle Washington: 403 pp.

Boyd, Robert 1999b. Indians, Fire, and the Land in the Pacific Northwest. Oregon State University Press, Corvallis, Oregon: 313 pp.

Braman, Tom 1987. "Indian Trail to Coast Teaches History, Ecology," Benton Bulletin, Philomath, Oregon (January 10): 1, 5. (PDF)

Carey, Charles H. 1971. General History of Oregon. Binfords & Mort, Publishers, Portland, Oregon: 916 pp.

Carloni, Ken 2005. The Ecological Legacy of Indian Burning Practices in Southwestern Oregon. Phd. Dissertation, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon: 181 pp.

Christy, John A., Edward R. Alverson, Molly P. Dougherty, Susan C. Kolar, Clifford W. Alton, Susan M. Hawes, O. Eugene Hickman, Jennifer A. Hiebler and Eric M. Nielsen 2008. Classification of Historical Vegetation in Oregon, as Recorded by General Land Office Surveyors. Oregon Natural Heritage Information Center, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon: 29 pp. (PDF)

Christy, John A. and Edward R. Alverson 2009. Synopsis of Methods Used to Map Historical Vegetation in Oregon, Based on General Land office Survey Notes. Oregon Natural Heritage Information Center, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon: 3 pp. (PDF)

Conedera, Marco, Willy Tinner, Christophe Neff, Manfred Meurer, Angela F. Dickens, Patrik Krebs 2009. “Reconstructing Past Fire Regimes: Methods, Applications and Relevance to Fire Management and Conservation,” Quaternary Science Reviews, Vol. 28: 435-456. (PDF)

Dickman, Alan 1976. Changes in Composition of a Ponderosa Pine Stand: The Effects of Fire Suppression Policy. Senior Thesis, Environmental Studies and Biology, University of California at Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, California: 42 pp. (PDF)

Dickman, Alan 1978. “Reduced Fire Frequency Changes Species Composition of a Ponderosa Pine Stand,” Journal of Forestry, Vol. 76, No. 1: 24-25. (PDF)

Dickson, Evelyn M. H. 1946. Food Plants of Western Oregon Indians. MA Thesis, Stanford University, Palo Alto, California: 218 pp.

Dodwell, Arthur and Theodore F. Rixon 1903. “Cascade Range Forest Reserve, Between Townships 18 and 19 South,” IN: Langille, Harold D., Fred G. Plummer, Arthur Dodwell, Theodore F. Rixon, John B. Leiberg, and Henry Gannett, Forest Conditions in the Cascade Range Forest Reserve, Oregon. Professional Paper No. 9, Series H, Forestry, 6, Department of the Interior, US Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, DC: 147-227.

Dubrasich, Mike 2010. Stand Reconstruction and 200 Years of Forest Development on Selected Sites in the Upper South Umpqua Watershed. Western Institute for the Study of the Environment, Lebanon, Oregon: 78 pp. (PDF)

Fry, Danny L. and Scott L. Stephens 2006. Influence of Humans and Climate on the Fire History of a Ponderosa Pine-Mixed Conifer Forest in the Southeastern Klamath Mountains, California,” Forest Ecology and Management, Vol. 223: 428-438. (PDF)

Gannett, Henry 1900. “Summary of Forestry Work in 1899-1900,” IN: Walcott, Charles D. (Director, USGS) 1900, Twenty-First Annual Report of the United States Geological Survey, Part V – Forest Reserves, Department of the Interior, US Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, DC: 9-25.

Gannett, Henry 1902. The Forests of Oregon. Department of the Interior, US Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, DC: 38 pp.

Gannett, Henry 1903. “Introduction,” IN: Langille, Harold D., Fred G. Plummer, Arthur Dodwell, Theodore F. Rixon, John B. Leiberg, and Henry Gannett, Forest Conditions in the Cascade Range Forest Reserve, Oregon. Professional Paper No. 9, Series H, Forestry, 6, Department of the Interior, US Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, DC: 15-26.

Haskin, Leslie L. 1934. Wild Flowers of the Pacific Coast. Binfords & Mort, Publishers (appears to be a post-1949 facsimile reproduction of original Metropolitan Press edition), Portland, Oregon: 409 pp.

Hartley, Laura 1993. AWS (Aircraft Warning Service), 1942-1943: “To Serve Our Country.” Self-published manuscript on file with USDA Umpqua National Forest, Tiller Ranger District, Tiller, Oregon. Clarence “Shorty” Hartley and Laura Hartley, Glendale, Oregon: 35 pp.

Haugo, Ryan D., Sonia A. Hall, Elizabeth M. Gray, Patrick Gonzalez, and Jonathon D. Bakker 2010. “Influences of Climate, Fire, Grazing, and Logging on Woody Species Composition Along an Elevation Gradient in the Eastern Cascades, Washington,” Forest Ecology and Management, Vol. 260: 2204-2213. (PDF)

Johannessen, Carl L., et al. 1971

Kay, Charles E. 1995. “Aboriginal Overkill and Native Burning: Implications for Modern Ecosystem Management,” Western Journal of Applied Forestry, Vol. 10, No. 4: 121-126. (PDF)

Kay, Charles E. 2007. “Are Lightning Fires Unnatural? A Comparison of Aboriginal and Lightning Ignition Rates in the United States,” IN: R. E. Masters and K. E. M. Galley (eds.), Proceedings of the 23rd Tall Timbers Fire Ecology Conference: Fire in the Grassland and Shrubland Ecosystems. Tall Timbers Research Station, Tallahassee, Florida: 16-28. (PDF)

Kays, M. Allan 1970, “Western Cascades Volcanic Series, South Umpqua Falls Region, Oregon,” IN: The Ore Bin, State of Oregon, Department of Geology and Mineral Industries, Portland, Oregon. Vol. 32, No. 5: 81-94. (PDF)

Kresek, Ray 1984. Fire Lookouts of the Northwest. Ye Galleon Press, Fairfield, Washington: 412 pp.

Laland, Jeff 1990. “The Indians of Southwestern Oregon: An Ethnohistorical Review,” IN: Living With The Land: The Indians Of Southwest Oregon -- The Proceedings of the 1989 Symposium on the Prehistory of Southwest Oregon, Edited by Nan Hannon and Richard K. Olmo, Southern Oregon Historical Society, Medford, Oregon: 95-119.

Leiberg, John B. 1900 “Cascade Range Forest Reserve from Township 28 South to Township 37 South, Inclusive, Together With the Ashland Forest Reserve and Forest Regions from Township 28 South to Township 41 South, Inclusive, and from Range 2 West to Range 14 East, Willamette Meridian, Inclusive,” IN: Walcott, Charles D. (Director, USGS) 1900, Twenty-First Annual Report of the United States Geological Survey, Part V – Forest Reserves, Department of the Interior, US Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, DC: 209-498.

Leiberg, John B. 1903. “Southern Part of Cascade Range Forest Reserve,” IN: Langille, Harold D., Fred G. Plummer, Arthur Dodwell, Theodore F. Rixon, John B. Leiberg, and Henry Gannett, Forest Conditions in the Cascade Range Forest Reserve, Oregon. Professional Paper No. 9, Series H, Forestry, 6, Department of the Interior, US Geological Survey, Government Printing Office, Washington, DC: 229-289.

Lewis, Henry T. 1990. “Reconstructing Patterns of Indian Burning in Southwestern Oregon,” IN: Living With The Land: The Indians Of Southwest Oregon -- The Proceedings of the 1989 Symposium on the Prehistory of Southwest Oregon, Edited by Nan Hannon and Richard K. Olmo. Southern Oregon Historical Society, Medford, Oregon: 80-93.

Lombardo, Keith J., Thomas W. Swetnam, Christopher H. Baisan, Mark I. Bochert 2009. “Using Bigcone Douglas-Fir Fire Scars and Tree Rings to Reconstruct Interior Chapparral Fire History,” Fire Ecology, Vol. 5, No. 3: 35-56. (PDF)

McArthur, Lewis L. 1982. Oregon Geographic Names, 5th Edition. Western Imprints, Oregon Historical Society, Portland, Oregon: 839 pp.

Minore, Don 1972. The Huckleberries of Oregon and Washington – A Dwindling Resource. USDA Forest Service Research Paper. PNW-143: 20 pp.

Minore, Don, Alan W. Smart, and Michael E. Dubrasich 1979. Huckleberry Ecology and Management Research in the Pacific Northwest. USDA Forest Service Research General Technical Report. PNW-93: 50 pp.

Olson, Diana L. and James K. Agee 2005. “Historical Fires in Douglas-Fir Dominated Riparian Forests of the Southern Cascades, Oregon,” Fire Ecology, Vol. 1, No. 1: 50-74. (PDF)

Oregon State Board of Forestry 1927. The Sixteenth Annual Report of the State Forester to the Governor for the Year Ending December 31, 1926. State Printing Department, Salem, Oregon: XX pp.

Oregon State Board of Forestry 1929. The Eighteenth Annual Report of the State Forester to the Governor for the Year Ending December 31, 1928. State Printing Department, Salem, Oregon: XX pp.

Oregon State Board of Forestry 1931. The Twenty-First Annual Report of the State Forester to the Governor for the Year Ending December 31, 1930. State Printing Department, Salem, Oregon: XX pp.

Oregon State Board of Forestry 1932. The Twenty-Second Annual Report of the State Forester to the Governor for the Year Ending December 31, 1931. State Printing Department, Salem, Oregon: XX pp.

Powell, David C. 2008. Using General Land Office Survey Notes to Characterize Historical Vegetation Conditions for the Umatilla National Forest. Umatilla National Forest, Pendleton, Oregon: 50 pp. (PDF)

Pyne, Stephen J. 1982.

Riddle, George 1993. Early Days in Oregon: A History of Riddle Valley. Reprints of a series of articles first appearing in the Riddle Enterprise in 1920 as first reprinted by the Riddle Parent-Teacher Association in 1948 and 1953, with additional texts, photos, and map. South Umpqua Historical Society, Inc., Canyonville, Oregon: 112 pp.

Ruby, Robert H. and John A. Brown 1986. A Guide to the Indian Tribes of the Pacific Northwest. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, Oklahoma: 289 pp.

Sapir, Edward 1907. “Notes on the Takelma Indians of Southwestern Oregon,” American Anthropologist. New Series, Vol. 9, No. 2: pp. 251-275.

Schwartz, Earl A. 1997. The Rogue River Indian War and Its Aftermath, 1850-1980. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, Oklahoma: 354 pp.

Sperlin, O. B. (ed.) 1931. The Brackenridge Journal for the Oregon Country. University of Washington Press, Seattle, WA: 70 pp.

Shaffer, Susan C. 1990. “The Umpqua People: Past, Present, and Future,” IN: Living With The Land: The Indians Of Southwest Oregon -- The Proceedings of the 1989 Symposium on the Prehistory of Southwest Oregon, Edited by Nan Hannon and Richard K. Olmo. Southern Oregon Historical Society, Medford, Oregon: 141-148.

Stewart, Omer C. 2002. Forgotten Fires: Native Americans and the Transient Wilderness. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, Oklahoma: 364 pp.

Todt, Donn L. and Nan Hannon 1998. "Plant Food Resource Ranking on the Upper Klamath River of Oregon and California: A Methodology with Archaeological Applications," Journal of Ethnobiology, Vol. 18, No. 2: 273-308.

Walling, Albert G. 1884. History of Southern Oregon: Comprising Jackson, Josephine, Douglas, Curry and Coos Counties, Compiled from the Most Authentic Sources. House of A. G. Walling, Portland, Oregon: 545 pp.

Wilkes 1845

Williams, Mark A. and William L. Baker 2010. “Bias and Error in Using Survey Records for Ponderosa Pine Landscape Restoration,” Journal of Biogeography, Vol. 37: 707-721. (PDF)

Zenk, Henry B. and Bruce Rigsby 1998. “Molala.” IN: Handbook of North American Indians, Volume 12 Plateau, Deward E. Walker, Jr., Volume Editor. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC: 439-445.

Zybach, Bob, Mack Barrington and Thomas Downey 1995. "Converting Historical Information to GIS: Political Boundaries of the Douglas-Fir Region, 1788 to 1995," Journal of Forestry. Vol. 93, No. 5: pp. 15-20. (PDF)

Zybach, Bob 1999. Using Oral Histories to Document Changing Forest Cover Patterns: Soap Creek Valley, Oregon, 1500-1999. MAIS Thesis, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon: 321 pp. (PDF)

Zybach, Bob 2002. "The Alseya Valley Prairie Complex, ca. 1850: Native Landscapes in Western GLO Surveys," IN: Changing Landscapes: "Sustaining Traditions," Proceedings of the 5th and 6th Annual Coquille Cultural Preservation Conferences, Coquille Indian Tribe, North Bend, OR: pp.161-188. (PDF)

Zybach, Bob 2003. The Great Fires: Indian Burning and Catastrophic Forest Fire Patterns of the Oregon Coast Range, 1491-1951. PhD Dissertation, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon: 458 pp. (HTML_DRAFT).

Zybach Bob 2007. Precontact History and Cultural Legacy of Forest Research Sites in Southwestern Oregon. Unpublished report prepared for Oregon State University College of Forestry Department of Forest Sciences and USDI Bureau of Land Management by NW Maps Co. and Oregon Websites and Watersheds Project, Inc., Albany, Oregon: 27 pp. [PDF]

Zybach, Bob 2008. The Owl Ridge Trails Project: Location and Documentation of Primary Travel, Trade, and Resource Use Trails of the Santiam Molalla in the South Santiam River and Blue River, Oregon Headwaters, from 1750 to 1850. Oregon Websites and Watersheds Project, Inc., Philomath, Oregon: 85 pp.

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