Engaged Palaeoethnobotany on the Northern Plains: A Compelling Future for Medicinal Plant Research

G. Stuart, E. L. Coward
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Abstract

The University of Saskatchewan Department of Archaeology & Anthropology became the first academic Department in Canada to publicly offer a Statement on Reconciliation. Most archaeologists recognize our colonial past and agree we need to expand our focus to incorporate better the thoughts, actions, and desires of the descendant communities of those who produced the material and nonmaterial remains we study. As a subdiscipline of archaeology, palaeoethnobotany with its emphasis on traditional plant use is well-positioned to engage fully with descendant communities. The Northern Plains would seem an ideal candidate for such research, given the rarity of existing palaeoethnobotanical research and the apparent absence of engaged research on medicinal plants. Current literature on the Northern Plains does include various ethnobotanical accounts, including discussion of plants with medicinal purposes. Though rare, there are also a few palaeoethnobotanical studies, which typically incorporate ethnobotanical data to aid interpretations. But what is lacking are clear attempts to bridge these sources of information; to conduct studies specifically designed through the coordinated efforts of Indigenous Knowledge Keepers and Healers with palaeoethnobotanists. We discuss how community-engaged scholarship of medicinal plants research on the Northern Plains may benefit both palaeoethnobotany and descendant communities.
北方平原上的古民族植物学:药用植物研究的一个令人信服的未来
萨斯喀彻温大学考古与人类学系成为加拿大第一个公开发表和解声明的学术部门。大多数考古学家认识到我们的殖民历史,并同意我们需要扩大我们的关注范围,以更好地融合那些生产我们研究的物质和非物质遗迹的人的后代社区的思想、行为和愿望。作为考古学的一个分支学科,强调传统植物利用的古民族植物学很好地定位于充分参与后代社区。考虑到现有古民族植物学研究的稀缺性和对药用植物的明显缺乏,北部平原似乎是此类研究的理想候选地。目前关于北方平原的文献确实包括各种民族植物学的描述,包括对药用植物的讨论。虽然罕见,但也有一些古民族植物学研究,这些研究通常结合民族植物学数据来帮助解释。但目前缺乏的是在这些信息来源之间架起桥梁的明确尝试;通过土著知识守护者和治疗师与古民族植物学家的协调努力,进行专门设计的研究。我们讨论了北部平原药用植物研究的社区参与奖学金如何使古民族植物学和后代社区受益。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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