{"title":"People of the Ecotone: Environment and Indigenous Power at the Center of Early America by Robert Michael Morrissey (review)","authors":"Thomas M. Wickman","doi":"10.1353/wmq.2023.a910412","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Reviewed by: People of the Ecotone: Environment and Indigenous Power at the Center of Early America by Robert Michael Morrissey Thomas M. Wickman People of the Ecotone: Environment and Indigenous Power at the Center of Early America. By Robert Michael Morrissey. Weyerhaeuser Environmental Books. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2022. 294 pages. Cloth, paper, ebook. On the vast and flat stage of the eastern tallgrass prairies, \"people and bison herds made each other\" (59), as Robert Michael Morrissey's book, People of the Ecotone, argues. The ecotone in the book's title refers to a shifting ecological transition zone of continental importance, in this case the easternmost places where a protruding thumb of tallgrass prairies pushed outward against woodlands on three sides. Centering the Illinois nation among Native communities converging at the midcontinent, People of the Ecotone presents a more-than-human history of a contested region at a time of climate change. Morrissey's excellent book traces the deep history of the ecotone and asks profoundly interdisciplinary questions about the contingencies, choices, and interactions that shaped Indigenous worlds of the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. Interpreting the French colonial archive and synthesizing insights from the fields of geology, paleobotany, paleoclimatology, archaeology, ecology, and geography, Morrissey presents grounded and specific histories of Indigenous readaptation and realignment. Few scholars have addressed environmental history and Native American history so well in a single work. A number of moments in deep time sets the stage: sixty-six million years ago when the eventual Rocky Mountain range emerged—casting a rain shadow and creating a moisture gradient of relative rainfall from driest to less dry, moving from the western plains to the area where the tallgrass prairies pointed east; the evolution, by around twenty-three million years ago, of the C4 carbon pathway in plants, which refers specifically to an ability to create biomass from four carbon acids and broadly to emerging traits adapted to arid conditions and grazing animals, which later became important as resulting grasses outcompeted less drought-tolerant species across new temperate grasslands; the divergence of early bison from cow-like ancestors about one million years ago; and the speciation of Bison bison, with a tendency to take flight over fight, between five and ten thousand years ago, a genetic change likely shaped by human hunting. For a time, by around 750 C.E., some peoples of the Midwest forged new ways of life around maize and other plants, but in response to intense droughts of the twelfth century, most had dispersed and readjusted to life without agriculture. Simultaneously, pushed by drought, bison from the plains expanded their range eastward, becoming \"perhaps the first large herds of bison grazing [End Page 780] in these far eastern prairies during the whole Holocene Epoch\" (12). Into these new conditions, people from the east, including ancestors of the Illinois, arrived from the thirteenth to the sixteenth centuries and found opportunity, increasingly devoting themselves to bison hunts and, crucially, shaping the landscape through fire. If not for the continued efforts of these newly bison-centered nations to shape their own history, climate might have pushed back the prairie and the bison sooner than it did. When the colder climate of the Little Ice Age intensified in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, reforestation might have taken back lands claimed by grass during drier and warmer periods, but instead evidence suggests that anthropogenic fires at these ecological edges kept the tallgrass biome intact and thus preserved the eastern bison herds where they were, at least for a time. In contrast to the climatic determinism that easily seeps into even some of the best climate histories, Morrissey's book describes Indigenous \"opportunities\" (12), not necessities, and demonstrates the ways that Illinois people and other Indigenous historical agents took advantage of the \"new abundance of the ecotone in the Little Ice Age\" (89).1 Over multiple generations, and certainly by the late seventeenth century, the Illinois nation and other competing Indigenous peoples of this ecotone region became bison people: running in coordinated pursuit of the herds, carrying skins and ribs long distances to large settlements, processing the hides at great scale and speed, distributing trade...","PeriodicalId":51566,"journal":{"name":"WILLIAM AND MARY QUARTERLY","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":1.1000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"WILLIAM AND MARY QUARTERLY","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/wmq.2023.a910412","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"历史学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"HISTORY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Reviewed by: People of the Ecotone: Environment and Indigenous Power at the Center of Early America by Robert Michael Morrissey Thomas M. Wickman People of the Ecotone: Environment and Indigenous Power at the Center of Early America. By Robert Michael Morrissey. Weyerhaeuser Environmental Books. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2022. 294 pages. Cloth, paper, ebook. On the vast and flat stage of the eastern tallgrass prairies, "people and bison herds made each other" (59), as Robert Michael Morrissey's book, People of the Ecotone, argues. The ecotone in the book's title refers to a shifting ecological transition zone of continental importance, in this case the easternmost places where a protruding thumb of tallgrass prairies pushed outward against woodlands on three sides. Centering the Illinois nation among Native communities converging at the midcontinent, People of the Ecotone presents a more-than-human history of a contested region at a time of climate change. Morrissey's excellent book traces the deep history of the ecotone and asks profoundly interdisciplinary questions about the contingencies, choices, and interactions that shaped Indigenous worlds of the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. Interpreting the French colonial archive and synthesizing insights from the fields of geology, paleobotany, paleoclimatology, archaeology, ecology, and geography, Morrissey presents grounded and specific histories of Indigenous readaptation and realignment. Few scholars have addressed environmental history and Native American history so well in a single work. A number of moments in deep time sets the stage: sixty-six million years ago when the eventual Rocky Mountain range emerged—casting a rain shadow and creating a moisture gradient of relative rainfall from driest to less dry, moving from the western plains to the area where the tallgrass prairies pointed east; the evolution, by around twenty-three million years ago, of the C4 carbon pathway in plants, which refers specifically to an ability to create biomass from four carbon acids and broadly to emerging traits adapted to arid conditions and grazing animals, which later became important as resulting grasses outcompeted less drought-tolerant species across new temperate grasslands; the divergence of early bison from cow-like ancestors about one million years ago; and the speciation of Bison bison, with a tendency to take flight over fight, between five and ten thousand years ago, a genetic change likely shaped by human hunting. For a time, by around 750 C.E., some peoples of the Midwest forged new ways of life around maize and other plants, but in response to intense droughts of the twelfth century, most had dispersed and readjusted to life without agriculture. Simultaneously, pushed by drought, bison from the plains expanded their range eastward, becoming "perhaps the first large herds of bison grazing [End Page 780] in these far eastern prairies during the whole Holocene Epoch" (12). Into these new conditions, people from the east, including ancestors of the Illinois, arrived from the thirteenth to the sixteenth centuries and found opportunity, increasingly devoting themselves to bison hunts and, crucially, shaping the landscape through fire. If not for the continued efforts of these newly bison-centered nations to shape their own history, climate might have pushed back the prairie and the bison sooner than it did. When the colder climate of the Little Ice Age intensified in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, reforestation might have taken back lands claimed by grass during drier and warmer periods, but instead evidence suggests that anthropogenic fires at these ecological edges kept the tallgrass biome intact and thus preserved the eastern bison herds where they were, at least for a time. In contrast to the climatic determinism that easily seeps into even some of the best climate histories, Morrissey's book describes Indigenous "opportunities" (12), not necessities, and demonstrates the ways that Illinois people and other Indigenous historical agents took advantage of the "new abundance of the ecotone in the Little Ice Age" (89).1 Over multiple generations, and certainly by the late seventeenth century, the Illinois nation and other competing Indigenous peoples of this ecotone region became bison people: running in coordinated pursuit of the herds, carrying skins and ribs long distances to large settlements, processing the hides at great scale and speed, distributing trade...
罗伯特·迈克尔·莫里西(Robert Michael Morrissey)的《过渡带人:早期美洲中心的环境与土著权力》,托马斯·m·维克曼(Thomas M. Wickman)著。罗伯特·迈克尔·莫里西著。惠好环境出版社。西雅图:华盛顿大学出版社,2022。294页。布,纸,电子书。正如罗伯特·迈克尔·莫里西(Robert Michael Morrissey)在《过渡带的人》(people of the Ecotone)一书中所言,在广袤而平坦的东部高草草原上,“人和野牛群相互创造”(59)。书名中的过渡带指的是具有大陆重要性的不断变化的生态过渡带,在这里指的是最东部的地方,那里突出的高草大草原向外伸展,三面与林地相对抗。以伊利诺斯州为中心,在大陆中部聚集的土著社区中,《过渡带人》呈现了气候变化时期一个有争议地区的超越人类的历史。莫里西的优秀著作追溯了过渡带的深刻历史,并就17世纪末和18世纪初形成土著世界的偶然性、选择和相互作用提出了深刻的跨学科问题。莫里西通过对法国殖民时期档案的解读,综合了地质学、古植物学、古气候学、考古学、生态学和地理学等领域的见解,呈现了土著重新适应和重新调整的具体历史。很少有学者能在一本著作中把环境史和美洲原住民史讲得这么好。时间深处的一些时刻奠定了基础:6600万年前,最终形成的落基山脉投下了雨影,形成了相对降雨量从最干燥到不太干燥的湿度梯度,从西部平原移动到高草草原指向东方的地区;大约2300万年前,植物C4碳途径的进化,具体指的是从四种碳酸中产生生物量的能力,以及广泛地指适应干旱条件和放牧动物的新特征,这后来变得重要,因为由此产生的草在新的温带草原上战胜了不那么耐旱的物种;大约一百万年前,早期野牛从类似母牛的祖先中分化出来;在五千到一万年前,美洲野牛的物种形成倾向于逃跑而不是战斗,这一基因变化可能是由人类狩猎造成的。在公元750年左右的一段时间里,中西部的一些民族围绕玉米和其他植物创造了新的生活方式,但为了应对12世纪的严重干旱,大多数人已经分散并重新适应了没有农业的生活。与此同时,在干旱的推动下,平原上的野牛向东扩展了它们的活动范围,成为“也许是整个全新世在这些远东大草原上放牧的第一大群野牛”(12)。在这些新的环境下,来自东部的人们,包括伊利诺伊人的祖先,从13世纪到16世纪来到这里,他们发现了机会,越来越多地投身于野牛狩猎,最重要的是,他们用火塑造了这里的景观。如果不是这些以野牛为中心的新国家不断努力塑造自己的历史,气候可能会更早地把草原和野牛赶走。当16世纪和17世纪小冰河期的寒冷气候加剧时,重新造林可能会收回在干旱和温暖时期被草占据的土地,但相反,有证据表明,在这些生态边缘的人为火灾保持了高草生物群落的完整,从而至少在一段时间内保护了东部野牛群。与气候决定论相比,即使是一些最好的气候史也很容易渗透,莫里西的书描述了土著居民的“机会”,而不是必需品,并展示了伊利诺斯人和其他土著历史人物利用“小冰河期过渡带的新丰饶”的方式经过几代人的努力,当然是在17世纪晚期,伊利诺斯民族和其他在这个过渡地带竞争的土著民族变成了野牛民族:协调地追赶牛群,长途跋涉把兽皮和肋骨运到大定居点,大规模、快速地加工兽皮,分配贸易……