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Identifying Sto:lo basketry : exploring different ways of knowing material cultureFortney, Sharon M. 05 1900 (has links)
Coast Salish coiled basketry has been a much-neglected area of research. Previous
investigations into this topic have been primarily concerned with geo-cultural
distributions, and discussions pertaining to stylistic attributes. In recent years several
scholars have turned their attention to the topic of Salish weavings, but they have focused
their efforts quite narrowly on textiles made from wool and other similar fibres to the
exclusion of weaving techniques such as basketry which utilise local roots and barks.
This thesis will focus exclusively on one type of Salish basketry - coiled basketry.
In this thesis I explore different ways of identifying, or "knowing", Coast Salish
coiled cedar root basketry. I specifically focus on Sto:lo basketry and identify three ways
in which Sto:lo basket makers "know" these objects. First I discuss the Halkomelem
terminology and what insights it provides to indigenous classification systems. Secondly,
I situate coiled basketry in a broader Coast Salish weaving complex in order to discuss
how basketry is influenced by other textile arts. This also enables me to explore how
Sto:lo weavers identify a well-made object. In the final section I discuss ownership of
designs by individuals and their families.
This research draws primarily from interviews conducted with Sto:lo basket
makers between May and September 2000 in their communities and at the Museum of
Anthropology at UBC. It is supplemented by interviews with basket makers from other
Salish communities and by the ethnographic literature on this topic. / Arts, Faculty of / Anthropology, Department of / Graduate
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Study of dinoflagellate cysts from recent marine sediments of British ColumbiaDobell, Patricia Elda Rose January 1978 (has links)
Viable cysts collected from natural sediments were induced to excyst. Ten cyst-theca relationships, first established elsewhere, were confirmed for British Columbia (B.C.). These were: Gonyaulax tamarensis, Protoperidinium aspidotum, P. claudicans, P. conicoides, P. conicum, P. cf. denticulatum, P. leonis, P. oblongum, and P. punctulatum. Five cyst-theca relationships were established for the first time: Peridiniopsis cf. hainanensis, Protoperidinium sp. nov., P. thorianum, and two apparently new species of Gonyaulax. P. pentagonum was found to have a cyst different from the cyst of this species in the Atlantic.
Forty-five samples from Recent sediments were collected along the coast of B.C. Twenty-three of the samples had very few cysts. Hidden Basin was the chief source of viable cysts for the excystment experiments.
Ten cyst-based taxa were described from the sediment samples.
These were: Operculodinium centrocarpum, the cyst of Scrippsiella
faeroense (= Micrhystridium bifurcatum), Spiniferites belerius, S.
bentori, S. bulloideus, S. elongatus, S. membranaceus, S. nodosum, and
S. ramosus. Tanyosphaeridium sp. has been recorded previously as the
cyst of Polykrikos schwarzi. Two new cyst-based taxa are described
for the first time. These are a cyst of Protoperidinium sp., and
Spiniferites "sp. A".
Cyst assemblages in the Recent sediments of B.C. were similar to many temperate estuarine and neritic areas. Some cysts which are characteristic of these areas in other regions, have not yet been found in B.C. The relative importance of some cysts also varies from that found in similar sediments elsewhere.
The dominance of Operculodinium centrocarpum in many of the cyst assemblages, including B.C., is a pattern typical of temperate estuarine conditions. Some cysts appear to be characteristically associated with fjord environments. Scrippsiella faeroense, for example, has been found in Norwegian fjords and Scottish sea lochs as well as some B.C. fjords and inlets. / Science, Faculty of / Botany, Department of / Zoology, Department of / Graduate
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Coast Salish senses of place : dwelling, meaning, power, property and territory in the Coast Salish worldThom, Brian David January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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Sedimentary organic matter : distribution and alteration processes in the coastal upwelling region off PeruReimers, Clare Elizabeth 06 November 1981 (has links)
Graduation date: 1982
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Relationships between lower trophic levels and hydrography during an upwelling season off OregonSchonzeit, Michael Harvey 27 July 1972 (has links)
Graduation date: 1973
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Tactics of Pacific Northwest albacore fishermen - 1968, 1969, 1970Keene, Donald Frederick 12 April 1974 (has links)
This study examines the relationship between fishing activities
of Pacific Northwest albacore fishermen and the availability of albacore.
Tactical responses of troll-boat fishermen were compared to
changes in daily apparent albacore abundance. Tactical responses
included boat aggregation and total applied effort (number of boats)
within a particular area, and net daily distances traveled by individual
boats and the medial center of the fleet. Apparent abundance estimates
were derived from logbook catch records collected during the
1968, 1969 and 1970 seasons.
Fishing power estimates of individual vessels allowed comparisons
to be made of the most successful and least successful boats.
In general, the most successful boats were larger, fished nearer
the fleet center, traveled less net distance each day and caught more
but smaller fish than the less successful boats. The magnitude of the
differences between the most successful and least successful boats
decreased progressively from 1968 to 1970.
Apparent abundance fluctuations were synchronous in separate
areas of the 1968 fishery but not in the 1969 and 1970 fisheries.
Fluctuations tended to be periodic in 1969 and 1970 but not in 1968.
No generalizations as to apparent abundance (patchiness, size of
albacore concentrations) could be determined among years.
Fishermen responded quickly to changes in apparent abundance
during 1968. Boats were highly aggregated on days of high catches,
and dispersed on days of low catches. Fishermen responses during
1969 were one day out of phase with catches. Boats aggregated one
day after days of high catches, indicating that fishermen experienced
difficulty in staying on concentrations of fish. In 1970 fishermen
experienced no difficulty in staying on fish concentrations as record
daily catches were reported.
According to interviews and questionnaires, albacore fishermen
rely heavily on inter-boat communications for planning their daily
fishing tactics. A consequence of this reliance on radio communication
appears to be a greater degree of boat aggregation and less willingness
to scout in areas away from the central fleet area. Areas to the north
and south of the central fleet were shown to have high estimates of
albacore abundance but were exploited by very few boats. Greater
dispersal of the fleet and use of several survey boats are suggested
as a means of increasing the total fishing catch. / Graduation date: 1974
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Determination of ⁶⁵Zn specific activity in various tissues of the California sea mussel, Mytilus californianusLarsen, Ingvar Lauren 15 December 1970 (has links)
The specific activity of ⁶⁵Zn (nanocuries ⁶⁵Zn/g total Zn)
was determined in various organs of the common coastal mussel,
Mytilus californianus Conrad, collected from six locations along
the Pacific Coast. These organs included the gills, mantle, foot,
reproductive organs, adductor muscle, and viscera. After ashing
and dissolving with nitric acid (8 M), each tissue was analyzed for
⁶⁵Zn by gamma-ray spectrometry. The determination of total zinc
concentrations of the various organs was accomplished by atomic
absorption spectrophotometry as well as by neutron activation
analysis.
Variable amounts of both stable zinc and radioactive ⁶⁵Zn
were observed within the specific tissues from a given location.
The ⁶⁵Zn specific activities of the tissues of organisms from a
particular station however, tended to be uniform, at least within
the uncertainty of the measurements. Both radiozinc and ⁶⁵Zn
specific activity decreased with distance from the Columbia River
mouth, whereas the stable zinc tended to remain uniform for a
specific tissue. Tissues high in radiozinc were also high
in stable zinc and conversely.
An estimate of the input specific activity from the mussel'
environment (food and/or water) was calculated from a simple
model resulting in a value similar to zooplankton values sampled
from within the Columbia River plume.
Comparison of the concentrations of zinc determined by
neutron activation with those determined by atomic absorption
spectrophotometry indicated a linear relationship between the
two methods. Results of atomic absorption measurements were
approximately 27% larger than the results of neutron activation
analysis, indicating the presence of a systematic error. The
higher values attained by atomic absorption are attributed to
evaporation during storage of the ash solution which would lead
to an increase in zinc concentration. In considering the two
methods of analysis, economy of both time and expenses favors
the atomic absorption method over that of neutron activation. / Graduation date: 1971
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Continuous seismic profiling investigation of the southern Oregon continental shelf between Cape Blanco and Coos BayMackay, Angus James 01 November 1968 (has links)
A structure map was constructed of the continental shelf between
Cape Blanco and Coos Bay, Oregon, exclusively from an interpretation
of approximately 700 km of continuous seismic profiles.
At least ten discernible seismic units were mapped on the bases of
acoustic appearance, lateral continuity, angular unconformities, and
faults. The offshore units tentatively were correlated with onshore
geology and are believed to range in age from the latest Jurassic to
late Pleistocene. The sparker profiles reveal that the continental
shelf off southern Oregon has experienced significant late Tertiary
and Quaternary accretion due to deposition and tectonic uplift.
The oldest rock exposures, believed to be the latest Jurassic
in age, crop out on the inner continental shelf on the topographic
highs off Cape Blanco and Coquille Point. Erosional remnants of
probable Late Cretaceous turbidites and the middle Eocene sandstone
beds also are exposed on the bathymetric high on the inner
shelf southwest of Cape Arago. The initial emplacement of these
three uplifted structural blocks is probably a result of late Eocene
wrench faulting of the Port Orford shear zone and of the postulated
shear zone at Coquille Point.
No other early Tertiary sediments apparently are exposed on
this portion of the Oregon continental shelf, but they probably extend
seaward at depth on the continental margin. Middle Tertiary
strata are believed to be exposed on the outer shelf topographic high
southwest of Cape Arago.
Sediments of Miocene to Pliocene age were deposited throughout
much of the continental shelf that was surveyed. The greatest
amount of deposition occurred in a north-south trending basin between
Cape Blanco and Coquille Bank. Late to post-Pliocene tectonism
uplifted and exposed the older underlying rocks on the inner
shelf, which are probably of uppermost Jurassic to middle Tertiary
age. These same stresses also deformed the Mio-Pliocene sediments
into gently undulating structures on the inner shelf. The
greatest deformation occurred on the outer shelf and formed
Coquille Bank, a north-south trending, doubly plunging, asymmetrical
anticline. The terraces or benches on the upper continental
slope to the north and south of the Bank are structural features resulting from the doubly plunging anticline.
Eustatic sea level lowerings during the Pleistocene truncated
the shelf structures as deep as 130 m below present sea level. The
detritus was deposited as a wedge of sediments, which forms an unconformable
contact with the underlying strata on the outer shelf and
upper slope between Coos Bay and Coquille Bank. In areas of deposition
there is no distinct break between the shelf and the upper slope;
the former merely merges into the latter in a continuous convex
curve. In areas of nondeposition, the edge of the shelf is an erosional
and structural feature.
A possible buried channel was detected northwest of the mouth
of the Coquille River. This sediment filled channel is believed to be
an erosional remnant of a former course of the Coquille River during
a lower stand of sea level. / Graduation date: 1969
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The patterns of abundance and relative abundance of benthic holothurians (Echinodermata:Holothurioidea) on Cascadia Basin and Tuft's Abyssal Plain in the northeast Pacific OceanCarney, Robert S. 14 September 1976 (has links)
Graduation date: 1977
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Spatial and temporal characteristics of bottom-trawl fish assemblages of the continental shelf and upper slope of the Pacific Coast of the United States, 1977-1992Jay, Chadwick V. 25 April 1996 (has links)
Twenty-three bottom-trawl fish assemblages were identified from the relative biomass of
33 dominant species that occurred in the National Marine Fisheries Services' triennial
trawl surveys over the continental shelf and upper slope off California, Oregon, and
Washington from 1977 to 1992. The assemblages accounted for about 70% of the total
variation in species composition among 2,565 hauls. Although the assemblages persisted
over the 15-yr study period and occurred within broad geographic boundaries, some had
substantially different spatial distributions among surveys. The ability to differentiate
assemblages across five environmental variables (latitude, depth, surface and bottom
water temperatures, and surficial substrate) was low. The preponderance of hake-dominated
assemblages throughout the study area suggests that Pacific hake (Merluccius
productus) may play a large role in the dynamics of demersal fish communities off the
west coast of the United States. The same data were used to establish general features
regarding the abundance and distribution of the 33 dominant fish, and investigate
intersurvey regional variation in species composition. Flatfish were generally widespread
and at low density within areas of their occurrence. In contrast, rockfish were
comparatively less widespread, and were at higher density within areas of their
occurrence. Pacific hake, spiny dogfish, and sablefish were both widespread and
occurred in high density. The greatest amount of variation in species composition
occurred in the shallow shelf region off California, and the shallow and deep regions
between Cape Mendocino and Cape Blanco. These regions corresponded to areas with
the greatest amount of annual variation in upwelling. Contrary to upwelling, intersurvey
variation in surface temperature did not appear to correspond to variation in species
composition, but there was an unanticipated negative correlation between variation in
bottom temperature and variation in species composition. Species composition was
influenced in most regions by Pacific hake, spiny dogfish, and sablefish. A conceptual
model was developed to explore the relationship between regional changes in a species'
biomass, incidence, and density, and their potential affect on species composition.
Empirical examination of the model was difficult. Five of six flatfish species (Pacific
sanddab, rex sole, Pacific halibut, Dover sole, and English sole) exhibited a significant
positive linear relationship between incidence and log-transformed biomass which is
consistent with density-dependent habitat selection. There was evidence (albeit weak)
from patterns in the occupancy of substrate types by these flatfish, that marginal habitats
are associated with areas of mud for Pacific sanddab and areas of sand for rex sole,
Pacific halibut, and Dover sole. / Graduation date: 1997
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