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Persistent mirage: How the 'Great Am...
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Gow, John Harley.
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Persistent mirage: How the 'Great American Desert' buries Great Plains Indian environmental history.
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Persistent mirage: How the 'Great American Desert' buries Great Plains Indian environmental history./
作者:
Gow, John Harley.
面頁冊數:
568 p.
附註:
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 74-06(E), Section: A.
Contained By:
Dissertation Abstracts International74-06A(E).
標題:
American history. -
電子資源:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=NR92095
ISBN:
9780494920954
Persistent mirage: How the 'Great American Desert' buries Great Plains Indian environmental history.
Gow, John Harley.
Persistent mirage: How the 'Great American Desert' buries Great Plains Indian environmental history.
- 568 p.
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 74-06(E), Section: A.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--The University of Saskatchewan (Canada), 2011.
In the winter of 1819 the United States shook under the first Great Depression, and on the Missouri River a great military/scientific enterprise sent to secure Missouri Territory shivered and died from cholera and scurvy. In 1820 Maj. Stephen Long and a poorly equipped expedition of twenty-three soldiers, amateur scientists, and landscape painters, set out from Engineer Cantonment to circumnavigate the unknown Central Great Plains during the height of summer, and rescue something from the debacle. After weathering endless rain and hallucinating waves of Comanche, they divided into two groups at the Arkansas, and then either starved and endured weeks of rain on the lower Arkansas, or ate rancid skunk and endured blistering sun on the 'Red River'. On return they found Long had 'mistaken' the Canadian River for the Red, and that they were yet another failed expedition to know the Louisiana Purchase. Unsurprisingly, Long labeled the whole place a "great desert." An editor improved the phrase to Great American Desert, and emblazoned the phrase on history.
ISBN: 9780494920954Subjects--Topical Terms:
2122692
American history.
Persistent mirage: How the 'Great American Desert' buries Great Plains Indian environmental history.
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Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 74-06(E), Section: A.
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In the winter of 1819 the United States shook under the first Great Depression, and on the Missouri River a great military/scientific enterprise sent to secure Missouri Territory shivered and died from cholera and scurvy. In 1820 Maj. Stephen Long and a poorly equipped expedition of twenty-three soldiers, amateur scientists, and landscape painters, set out from Engineer Cantonment to circumnavigate the unknown Central Great Plains during the height of summer, and rescue something from the debacle. After weathering endless rain and hallucinating waves of Comanche, they divided into two groups at the Arkansas, and then either starved and endured weeks of rain on the lower Arkansas, or ate rancid skunk and endured blistering sun on the 'Red River'. On return they found Long had 'mistaken' the Canadian River for the Red, and that they were yet another failed expedition to know the Louisiana Purchase. Unsurprisingly, Long labeled the whole place a "great desert." An editor improved the phrase to Great American Desert, and emblazoned the phrase on history.
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A Persistent Mirage is both an exegesis of the GAD myth and an HGIS study of the groups and biomes the desert mirage occludes. Desert was a cultural term meaning beyond the pale that beached with the Puritans. Like Turner's frontier, it stayed a step ahead of settlement, moving west to the tall grass prairies before crossing the Mississippi to colonize the Great Plains. Once there it did calculable damage to the writing of Plains Aboriginal history. After all, who lives upon deserts but wandering beasts and savages? Beneath the mirage was an aboriginal network of agricardos, or agricultural and trading centers, growing enough food to support large populations, and produce tradable surpluses, undergirded by bison protein. Euramericans from Cabeza de Vaca on were drawn to agricardos which helped broker the passages of horses to the Northern Plains and of firearms to the Southwest. While some withstood epidemic disease, the escalation of inter-group violence and environmental degradation due to the adoption of the horse by agricardo groups proved their undoing. Beneath the Great American Desert lies the great Indian Agricardo Complex, with its history just begun.
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