Читать книгу American Environmental History - Группа авторов - Страница 29

References

Оглавление

1 Acosta, J. D. 1880 (1590). The natural and moral history of the Indies. Trans. E. Olmston. Hakluyt Society, vol. 60, 61. London.

2 Bennett, C. F. 1968. Human influences on the zoo-geography of Panama. Ibero-Americana 51. Berkeley: University of California Press.

3 Bowden, M. J. 1992. The invention of American tradition. Journal of Historical Geography 18: 3–26.

4 Butzer, K. W. 1990. The Indian legacy in the American landscape. In The making of the American landscape, ed. M. P. Conzen, pp. 27–50. Boston: Unwin Hyman.

5 ———, and Butzer, E. K. 1993. The sixteenth-century environment of the central Mexican Bajío: Archival reconstruction from Spanish land grants. In Culture, form, and place, ed. K. Mathewson, pp. 89–124. Baton Rouge: Dept. of Geology, Louisiana State University.

6 Colón, C. 1976. Diario del descubrimiento. Vol. 1, ed. M. Alvar. Madrid: Editorial La Muralla.

7 Columbus, C. 1961. Four voyages to the new world: Letters and selected documents. ed. R. H. Major, New York: Corinth Books.

8 Cook, S. F. 1949. Soil erosion and population in Central Mexico. Ibero-Americana 34. Berkeley: University of California Press.

9 ———, and Borah, W. 1971–79. Essays in population history. 3 vols. Berkeley: University of California Press.

10 Cronon, W. 1983. Changes in the land: Indians, colonists, and the ecology of New England. New York: Hill and Wang.

11 Culbert, T. P., and Rice, D. S., eds. 1990. Pre-columbian population history in the Maya lowlands. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.

12 Day, G. M. 1953. The Indian as an ecological factor in the northeastern forest. Ecology 34: 329–346.

13 Denevan, W. M. 1961. The upland pine forests of Nicaragua. University of California Publications in Geography 12: 251–320.

14 ———. 1966. The aboriginal cultural geography of the Llanos de Mojos of Bolivia. Ibero-Americana 48. Berkeley: University of California Press.

15 ——— 1980. Tipología de configuraciones agrícolas prehispánica. America Indigena 40: 619–652.

16 ——— 1988. Measurement of abandoned terracing from air photos: Colca Valley, Peru. Yearbook, Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers 14: 20–30.

17 ——— 1991. Prehistoric roads and causeways of lowland tropical America. In Ancient road networks and settlement hierarchies in the New World, ed. C. D. Trombold, pp. 230–242. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

18 ———, ed. 1992 [1976]. The native population of the Americas in 1492. 2nd ed. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.

19 Dobyns, H. F. 1981. From fire to flood: Historic human destruction of Sonoran Desert riverine oases. Socorro, NM: Ballena Press.

20 ——— 1983. Their number become thinned: Native American population dynamics in eastern North America. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press.

21 Donkin, R. A. 1979. Agricultural terracing in the aboriginal New World. Viking Fund Publications in Anthropology 56. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.

22 Doolittle, W. E. 1990. Canal irrigation in prehistorical Mexico: The sequence of technological changes. Austin: University of Texas Press.

23 ——— 1992. Agriculture in North America on the eve of contact: A reassessment. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 82(3): 386–401.

24 Forman, R. T. T., and Russell, E. W. B. 1983. Evaluation of historical data in ecology. Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America 64: 5–7.

25 Fowler, M. 1989. The Cahokia atlas: A historical atlas of Cahokia archaeology. Studies in Illinois Archaeology 6. Springfield: Illinois Historic Preservation Agency.

26 Garcilaso de la Vega, T. I. 1980 [1605]. The Florida of the Inca: A history of the Adelantade Hernando de Soto. 2 vols. Trans.]. ed. J. G. Varner & J. J. Varner. Austin: University of Texas Press.

27 Garren, K. H. 1943. Effects of fire on vegetation of the southeastern United States. The Botanical Review 9: 617–654.

28 Gartner, W. G. 1992. The Hulbert Creek ridged fields: Pre-Columbian agriculture near the Dells of Wisconsin. Master’s thesis, Department of Geography, University of Wisconsin, Madison.

29 Gilmore, M. R. 1931. Dispersal by Indians a factor in the extension of discontinuous distribution of certain species of native plants. Papers of the Michigan Academy of Science, Arts and Letters 13: 89–94.

30 Good, K. R. 1987. Limiting factors in Amazonian ecology. In Food and evolution: Toward a theory of human food habitats, eds. M. Harris & E. B. Ross, pp. 407–421. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.

31 Gordon, B. L. 1957. Human geography and ecology in the Sinú country of Colombia. Ibero-Americana 39. Berkeley: University of California Press.

32 ——. 1982. A Panama forest and shore: Natural history and Amerindian culture in Bocas del Toro. Pacific Grove: Boxwood Press.

33 Greenberg, L. S. C. 1991. Garden-hunting among the Yucatec Maya. Etnoecológica 1: 30–36.

34 Haffer, J. 1991. Mosaic distribution patterns of neotropical forest birds and underlying cyclic disturbance processes. In The mosaic-cycle concept of ecosystems, ed. H. Remmert, pp. 83–105. Ecological Studies, vol. 85. Berlin: Springer-Verlag.

35 Hardoy, J. 1968. Urban planning in pre-Columbian America. New York: George Braziler.

36 Hills, T. L., and Randall, R. E., 1968. The ecology of the forest/savanna boundary. Savanna Research Series 13. Montreal: McGill University.

37 Hyslop, J. 1984. The Inka road system. New York: Academic Press.

38 Kolata, A. L. 1991. The technology and organization of agricultural production in the Tiwanaku state. Latin American Antiquity 2: 99–125.

39 Lewis, H. T. 1982. Fire technology and resource management in aboriginal North America and Australia. In Resource managers: North American and Australian hunter-gatherers, eds. N. M. Williams & E. S. Hunn, pp. 45–67. AAAS Selected Symposia 67. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.

40 Lovell, W. G. 1992. “Heavy shadows and black night”: Disease and depopulation in Colonial Spanish America. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 82(3): 426–443.

41 Martin, C. 1978. Keepers of the game: Indian-animal relationships and the fur trade. Berkeley: University of California Press.

42 Mathewson, K. 1987. Landscape change and cultural persistence in the Guayas wetlands, Ecuador. Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Geography, University of Wisconsin, Madison.

43 McEvedy, C., and Jones, R. 1978. Atlas of world population history. New York: Penguin Books.

44 McNutt, F. A., trans. 1909. Bartholomew de las Cases: His life, his apostolate, and his writings. New York: Putnam’s.

45 Medina, E. 1980. Ecology of tropical American savannas: An ecophysiological approach. In Human ecology in savanna environments, ed. D. R. Harris, pp. 297–319. London: Academic Press.

46 Meinig, D. W. 1986. The shaping of America. A geographical perspective on 500 years of history, vol. 1, Atlantic America, 1492–1800. New Haven: Yale University Press.

47 Melville, E. G. K. 1990. Environmental and social change in the Valle del Mezquital, Mexico, 1521–1600. Comparative Studies in Society and History 32: 24–53.

48 Mueller-Dombois, D. 1981. Fire in tropical ecosystems. In Fire regimes and ecosystem properties: Proceedings of the Conference, Honolulu, 1978, pp. 137–176. General Technical Report WO-26, Washington: U.S. Forest Service.

49 Parsons, J. J. 1975. The changing nature of New World tropical forests since European colonization. In The use of ecological guidelines for development in the American humid tropics, pp. 28–38. Morges: International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources Publications. n.s., 31.

50 ———. 1985. Raised field farmers as pre-Columbian landscape engineers: Looking north from the San Jorge (Colombia). In Prehistoric intensive agriculture in the tropics, ed. I. S. Farrington, pp. 149–165. International Series 232. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports.

51 ———, and Denevan, W. M. 1967. Pre-Columbian ridged fields. Scientific American 217(1): 92–100.

52 Patterson, W. A., and Sassaman, K. E. . 1988. Indian fires in the prehistory of New England. In Holocene human ecology in Northeastern North America, ed. G. P. Nicholas, pp. 107–135. New York: Plenum.

53 Plazas, C., and Falchetti, A. M. 1987. Poblamiento y adecuación hidráulica en el bajo Río San Jorge, Costa Atlantica, Colombia. In Prehistoric agricultural fields in the Andean region, eds. W. M. Denevan, K. Mathewson, & G. Knapp, pp. 483–503. International Series 359. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports.

54 Posey, D. A. 1985. Indigenous management of tropical forest ecosystems: The case of the Kayapó Indians of the Brazilian Amazon. Agroforestry Systems 3: 139–158.

55 Pyne, S. J. 1982. Fire in America: A cultural history of wildland and rural fire. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

56 Raup, H. M. 1937. Recent changes in climate and vegetation in southern New England and adjacent New York. Journal of the Arnold Arboretum 18: 79–117.

57 Roosevelt, A. C. 1991. Moundbuilders of the Amazon: Geophysical archaeology on Marajo Island, Brazil. San Diego: Academic Press.

58 Rostlund, E. 1957. The myth of a natural prairie belt in Alabama: An interpretation of historical records. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 47: 392–411.

59 ———. 1960. The geographic range of the historic bison in the southeast. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 50: 395–407.

60 Russell, E. W. B. 1983. Indian-set fires in the forests of the northeastern United States. Ecology 64: 78–88.

61 Sale, K. 1990. The conquest of paradise: Christopher Columbus and the Columbian legacy. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.

62 Sánchez-Albornoz, N. 1974. The population of Latin America: A history. Berkeley: University of California Press.

63 Sanders, W. T., Parsons, J. R., and Santley, R. S. 1979. The Basin of Mexico: Ecological processes in the evolution of a civilization. New York: Academic Press.

64 Sauer, C. O. 1950. Grassland Climax, Fire, And Man. Journal of Range Management 3: 16–21.

65 ———. 1958. Man in the ecology of tropical America. Proceedings of the Ninth Pacific Science Congress, 1957 20: 104–110.

66 ———. 1963 [1927]. The barrens of Kentucky. In Land and life: A selection from the writings of Carl Ortwin Sauer, ed. J. Leighly, pp. 23–31. Berkeley: University of California Press.

67 ———. 1966. The early Spanish Main. Berkeley: University of California Press.

68 ———. 1971. Sixteenth-century North America: The land and the people as seen by the Europeans. Berkeley: University of California Press.

69 ———. 1975. Man’s dominance by use of fire. Geoscience and Man 10: 1–13.

70 Scott, G. A. J. 1978. Grassland development in the Gran Pajonal of eastern Peru. Hawaii Monographs in Geography 1. Honolulu: University of Hawaii.

71 Sheets, P., and Sever, T. L. 1991. Prehistoric footpaths in Costa Rica: Transportation and communication in a tropical rainforest. In Ancient road networks and settlement hierarchies in the New World, ed. C. D. Trombold, pp. 53–65. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

72 Siemens, A. H. 1990. Between the summit and the sea: Central Veracruz in the nineteenth century. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press.

73 Silver, T. 1990. A new face on the countryside: Indians, colonists, and slaves in South Atlantic forests, 1500–1800. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

74 Silverberg, R. 1968. Mound builders of ancient America: The archaeology of a myth. Greenwich, CT: New York Graphic Society.

75 Stout, A. B. 1911. Prehistoric earthworks in Wisconsin. Ohio Archaeological and Historical Publications 20: 1–31.

76 Sturtevant, W. C. 1961. Taino agriculture. In The evolution of horticultural systems in native South America, causes and consequences: A symposium, ed. J. Wilbert, pp. 69–82. Caracas Sociedad de Ciencias Naturales La Salle.

77 Taylor, D. L. 1981. Fire history and fire records for Everglades National Park. Everglades National Park Report T-619. Washington: National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior.

78 Thompson, D. Q., and Smith, R. H. 1970. The forest primeval in the Northeast – A great myth? Proceedings, Tall Timbers Fire Ecology Conference 10: 255–265.

79 Thoreau, H. D. 1949. The journal of Henry D. Thoreau. vol. 7, September 1, 1854–October 30, 1855, ed. B. Torrey & F. H. Allen, Boston: Houghton Mifflin.

80 Trombold, C. D., ed. 1991. Ancient road networks and settlement hierarchies in the New World. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

81 Uhl, C., Nepstad, D., Buschbacher, R., Clark, K., Kauffman, B., and Subler, S. 1990. Studies of ecosystem response to natural and anthropogenic disturbances provide guidelines for designing sustainable land-use systems in Amazonia. In Alternatives to deforestation: Steps toward sustainable use of the Amazon rain forest, ed. A. B. Anderson, pp. 24–42. New York: Columbia University Press.

82 Watts, W. A., and Bradbury, J. P. 1982. Paleoecological studies at Lake Patzcuaro on the west-central Mexican plateau and at Chalco in the Basin of Mexico. Quaternary Research 17: 56–70.

83 Whitmore, T. M., and Turner, B. L. II 1992. Landscapes of cultivation in Mesoamerica on the eve of the conquest. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 82(3): 402–425.

84 Whitmore, T. M., Turner, B. L., Johnson, D. L., Kates, R. W., and Gottschang, T. R. . 1990. Long-term population change. In The earth as transformed by human action, ed. B. L. TurnerII, et al., pp. 25–39. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

85 Williams, B. J. 1972. Tepetate in the Valley of Mexico. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 62: 618–626.

86 ———. 1989a. Contact period rural overpopulation in the Basin of Mexico: Carrying-capacity models tested with documentary data. American Antiquity 54: 715–732.

87 Williams, M. 1989b. Americans and their forests: A historical geography. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

American Environmental History

Подняться наверх