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- Newsgroups: soc.history
- Path: sparky!uunet!timbuk.cray.com!hemlock.cray.com!cb
- From: cb@tamarack13.timbuk (Chris Brewster)
- Subject: Re: Columbus/Slaves
- Message-ID: <CB.93Jan21141136@tamarack13.timbuk>
- In-reply-to: miklg@acuson.com's message of Thu, 21 Jan 1993 16:22:12 GMT
- Lines: 17
- Nntp-Posting-Host: tamarack13
- Organization: pubs
- References: <1isalfINNqnm@morrow.stanford.edu> <1993Jan13.055828.8928@midway.uchicago.edu>
- <1993Jan14.154900.1115@island.COM>
- Distribution: usa
- Date: 21 Jan 93 14:11:40 CST
-
- Mike Fester writes:
-
- > I believe examination of the American Great Plains indicate that it was once
- > the 'Great Inland Forest' (a typical deciduous crown forest). It was burned
- > off by the Indians several thousand years ago in an old method of hunting
- > buffalo.
-
- A book from about 1978 called The American Farm contains a long description of
- the prairies and their history. I believe the text either says explicitly or
- clearly implies that the great plains were always prairie ("always" meaning
- "since well before people arrived"), though the boundary between forest and
- prairie kept shifting one way and then the other. Fires were a basic part of
- the prairie/forest competition, though the fires were only the relatively rare
- ones caused by lightning.
-
- Chris Brewster
- cb@cray.com
-