Tin Pan Blues


Thursday, June 11, 2009
Kwame Anthony Appiah, "Is the Post- in Postmodernism the Post- in Postcolonial?," Critical Inquiry 17.2 (1991): 336-57. (on reserve as photocopy)


Tuesday, June 09, 2009
http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.1656/1528-7092(2008)7%5B245:ATPTCO%5D2.0.CO%3B2

Southeastern Naturalist
Published by: Humboldt Field Research Institute
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Southeastern Naturalist 7(2):245-266. 2008
doi: 10.1656/1528-7092(2008)7[245:ATPTCO]2.0.CO;2

Assessing the Pre-modern Tree Cover of the Ackerman Unit, Tombigbee National Forest, North Central Hills, MS, Using GLO Survey Notes and Archaeological Data

Evan Peacock1,*, John Rodgers2, Kevin Bruce3, and Jessica Gray4

1Cobb Institute of Archaeology, PO Box AR, Mississippi State University, 39762.

2Department of Geosciences, PO Box 5548, Mississippi State University, 39762.

3Marcell/Deer River Ranger District, Chippewa National Forest, PO Box 308, 1037 Division Street, Deer River, MN 56636.

4109 Old Farm Road, Perry, GA 31069.

* Corresponding author - peacock@anthro.msstate.edu.
Abstract

General Land Office (GLO) survey data from the Ackerman Unit of the Tombigbee National Forest, MS are used to characterize early 19th-century tree cover in a part of the North Central Hills physiographic province. Archaeological settlement-pattern data indicate that the area was abandoned ca. A.D. 1000 and that early Historic-period settlement was minimal by the time the GLO surveys were done. The GLO data therefore represent forest conditions as they developed in the absence or near-absence of human influence. Tree cover consisted of oak-dominated hardwoods with a non-clustered pine component. The distributions of some hardwood species were related to geological controls. Based on previous archaeological work, the argument concerning minimal human impact can be extended to the entire North Central Hills province, with consequent implications for forest management on federal lands.