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Camassia

Camassia is a genus of plants in the asparagus family native to North America. Common names include camas, quamash, Indian hyacinth, camash, and wild hyacinth.[citation needed]

Camassia
Indian camas (Camassia quamash)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Order: Asparagales
Family: Asparagaceae
Subfamily: Agavoideae
Genus: Camassia
Lindl.
Type species
Camassia quamash
(Pursh) Greene
Synonyms[1]
  • Stilla W.Young
  • Cyanotris Raf.
  • Bulbedulis Raf.
  • Kweetla Raf.
  • Lemotrys Raf.
  • Quamasia Raf.
  • Sitocodium Salisb.
Cusick's camas (Camassia cusickii)
Common camas (Camassia quamash ssp. quamash)

It grows in the wild in great numbers in moist meadows. They are perennial plants with basal linear leaves measuring 20 to 80 centimetres (8 to 32 in) in length, which emerge early in the spring. They grow to a height of 30 to 130 cm (12 to 50 in), with a multi-flowered stem rising above the main plant in summer. The six-petaled flowers vary in color from pale lilac or white to deep purple or blue-violet. Camas can appear to color entire meadows when in flower.

Taxonomy and species edit

Historically, the genus was placed in the lily family (Liliaceae), when this was very broadly defined to include most lilioid monocots.[2] When the Liliaceae was split, in some treatments Camassia was placed in a family called Hyacinthaceae (now the subfamily Scilloideae).[3] DNA and biochemical studies have led the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group to reassign Camassia to the family Asparagaceae, subfamily Agavoideae.[4]

Species edit

The World Checklist of Selected Plant Families recognizes six species as of April 2015:[1][5][6]

formerly included[1]

The name Camassia biflora was coined in 1969[7] for a South American species now known as Oziroe biflora.[8]

Synonyms edit

The term Camassia esculenta is a confusing one. Not an accepted name, it has been used twice, both for Camassia quamash and for Camassia scilloides. Consequently, the reference to Camassia esculenta (Ker Gawl.) B.L.Rob.[9] as a synonym for C. scilloides is deemed illegitimate,[10] while reference to Camassia esculenta (Nutt.) Lindl.[11] is a non-accepted name (synonym) for C. quamash subsp. quamash.[12] Hence the continuing horticultural usage without qualification is potentially confusing.[13]

Cultivation and uses edit

Indigenous methods of cultivation edit

Indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest engaged in active management and cultivation of blue camas (Kweetla). They used controlled burning to clear land and improve growing conditions. While blue camas plots occurred naturally in the Pacific Northwest, Indigenous peoples would maintain a plot through weeding, tilling, harvesting Camas bulbs, and replanting. Camas plots were harvested by individuals or kin-groups, who were recognized as a particular plot’s cultivators or stewards.[14][15][16] Stewardship was typically lineage-based, and cultivation rights to a particular plot were fiercely guarded. Multiple generations would often harvest the same Camas plot. Plots have been recorded as possessing physical boundary markers, and there were social consequences for harvesting from a plot that was recognized as being maintained by a particular individual or kin-group.[15][16] The camas bulbs were harvested with a pointed wooden tool, with the work of cultivation being done primarily by women.[17]

Food use edit

Camassia species were an important food staple for Indigenous peoples and settlers in parts of the American Old West. While Camassia species are edible and nutritious, the white-flowered deathcamas species (which are not in the genus Camassia but in a number of genera in the tribe Melanthieae) that grow in the same areas are toxic, and the bulbs are quite similar in appearance. It is easiest to tell the plants apart when they are in flower.

The quamash was a food source for many indigenous peoples in western North America. Blue camas was harvested when in bloom, in spring or early summer.[18] After being harvested the bulbs were pit-roasted or boiled. A pit-cooked camas bulb can take up to two days to fully cook. The look and taste is something like baked sweet potato, but sweeter, and with more crystalline fibers due to the presence of inulin in the bulbs. The eating of too many such baked bulbs – especially if undercooked – can cause excessive flatulence, due to their containing inulin and other oligosaccharides.[19][20] After cooking, the bulbs could be pounded into a paste and made into cakes.[21]

Native American peoples who ate camas include the Nez Perce (Nimíipuu), Cree, Kalapuya, Blackfoot, Yakama, and Coast Salish, including the Lekwungen or Songhees who collected camas in what is now Victoria, British Columbia, the Lekwungen name for which was Camosun, or "place to gather camas".[22] The Kutenai called the camas "xapi" (Ktunaxa).[23] Camas bulbs contributed to the survival of members of the Lewis and Clark Expedition.[24]

In the Great Basin, expanded settlement by whites accompanied by turning cattle and hogs onto camas prairies greatly diminished food available to native tribes and increased tension between Native Americans and settlers and travelers.[25] Though the once-immense[citation needed] spreads of camas lands have diminished because of modern developments and agriculture, numerous camas prairies and marshes may still be seen today.

Ornamental use edit

This bulbflower naturalizes well in gardens. The bulb grows best in well-drained soil high in humus. It will grow in lightly shaded forest areas and on rocky outcrops as well as in open meadows or prairies. Additionally it is found growing alongside streams and rivers. The plants may be divided in autumn after the leaves have withered. Bulbs should be planted in the autumn. Additionally the plant spreads by seed rather than by runners.

Place names edit

Many areas in the Pacific Northwest are named for the plant, including Camas Valley, Oregon; the city of Camas, Washington; Lacamas Creek in southern Washington;[26] the Camas Prairie in northern Idaho (and its Camas Prairie Railroad); Camas County in southern Idaho;[27] and Kamas, Utah.

Role in indigenous trade and culture edit

Camas was an important component of the diets of most indigenous groups located in the Pacific Northwest. However, not all indigenous groups harvested camas themselves. Instead, many relied on trade in order to procure it. Indigenous groups that lived in environments that suited camas production, such as the Coast Salish, developed networks of exchange in order to procure a variety of goods and foods, such as cedar bark baskets and dried halibut.[28]

In North American Indigenous cultures, trade had economic as well as diplomatic functions, with ceremonies such as the potlatch serving as a means to legitimize an individual’s rule and establish their status as a provider.[29] Camas was frequently traded in large volumes for such occasions.[30]

Theories of anthropogenic dispersal edit

As indigenous land-management techniques have been theorized as having had a significant impact on the maintenance of the Garry oak ecosystem,[31] one of the primary ecosystems in which Camassia quamash grows, researchers have investigated the potentiality of anthropogenic transport through an investigation of the genetic structure of Camassia quamash.[18] Despite historical evidence for anthropogenic maintenance of camas plots and transportation through Indigenous trade networks,[28] analysis of the genetic structures of Camassia quamash have not substantiated theories of anthropogenic dispersal. The distribution of Camassia quamash across the Pacific Northwest is most likely the result of postglacial migration. These results imply that the degree of anthropogenic dispersal of Camassia quamash that occurred was not of such a scale as to leave a marker in the plant’s genetic structure.[18]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c World Checklist of Selected Plant Families, The Board of Trustees of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, retrieved 2015-04-10
  2. ^ Ranker, Tom A. & Hogan, Tim, Camassia, retrieved 2012-05-16, in Flora of North America Editorial Committee, ed. (1982), Flora of North America (online), eFloras.org
  3. ^ Fernandez, A.; Daviña, J.R. (1991), "Heterochromatin and Genome Size in Fortunatia and Camassia (Hyacinthaceae)", Kew Bulletin, 46 (2): 307–316, doi:10.2307/4110602, JSTOR 4110602
  4. ^ Stevens, P.F., Angiosperm Phylogeny Website: Asparagales: Agavoideae
  5. ^ The Plant List
  6. ^ Biota of North America Progran 2013 county distribution maps
  7. ^ Cocucci, Alfredo Elio. 1969. Kurtziana 5: 184
  8. ^ Speta, Franz. 1998. Phyton. Annales Rei Botanicae 38: 56
  9. ^ Rhodora 10: 31 (1908)
  10. ^ World Checklist of Selected Plant Families: Camassia esculenta (Ker Gawl.) B.L.Rob.
  11. ^ Edwards's Bot. Reg. 18: t. 1486 (1832)
  12. ^ World Checklist of Selected Plant Families: Camassia esculenta (Nutt.) Lindl.
  13. ^ Dig Drop Done
  14. ^ Lepofsky, Dana; Lyons, Natasha (Autumn 2013). "The Secret Past Life of Plants: Paleoethnobotany in British Columbia". BC Studies. 179: 39–72 – via ProQuest.
  15. ^ a b Kuhnlein, Harriet V., Turner, Nancy J. (1991). Traditional Plant Foods of Canadian indigenous Peoples: Nutrition, Botany and Use. Philadelphia: Gordon and Breach. p. 12. ISBN 2881244653.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  16. ^ a b Turner, Nancy J. (Autumn 2013). "Plant Management Systems of British-Columbia's First Peoples". BC Studies. 179: 106–256 – via ProQuest.
  17. ^ Brown, R (1868). "On the Vegetable Products, used by the North-West American Indians as Food and Medecine, in the Arts, and in Superstitious Rites". Transactions of the Botanical Society. 9: 378–396.
  18. ^ a b c Tomimatsu, Hiroshi; Kephart, Susan R.; Vellend, Mark (2009). "Phylogeography of Camassia quamash in western North America: postglacial colonization and transport by indigenous peoples". Molecular Ecology. 18 (18): 3918–3928. Bibcode:2009MolEc..18.3918T. doi:10.1111/j.1365-294X.2009.04341.x. PMID 19732332. S2CID 14031676.
  19. ^ "Plant Spotlights" (PDF).
  20. ^ "Appreciating Common Camas (Camassia quamash) during Native Plant Appreciation Week".
  21. ^ Freedman, Robert Louis (1976). "Native North American Food Preparation Techniques". Boletín Bibliográfico de Antropología Americana (1973-1979). Pan American Institute of Geography and History. 38 (47): 130–131. JSTOR 43996285., s.v. Camas Salish
  22. ^ "About Us". Retrieved 2022-02-17.
  23. ^ "FirstVoices- Ktunaxa. Plants: food plants: words". Retrieved 2012-07-07.
  24. ^ Hunter, Frances. Nearly all the men Sick: Lewis and Clark meet the Camas Root" in Frances Hunter's American Heroes Blog. [1] Accessed 2016/3/24
  25. ^ The Shoshoni Frontier and the Bear River Massacre, Brigham D. Madsen, foreword by Charles S. Peterson, University of Utah Press (1985, paperback 1995), trade paperback, 286 pages, ISBN 0-87480-494-9
  26. ^ Majors, Harry M. (1975). Exploring Washington. Van Winkle Publishing Co. p. 120. ISBN 978-0-918664-00-6.
  27. ^ Idaho.gov - Camas County November 20, 2011, at the Wayback Machine - accessed 2009-06-06
  28. ^ a b Turner, Nancy J.; Loewen, Dawn C. (1998). "The Original "Free Trade": Exchange of Botanical Products and Associated Plant Knowledge in Northwestern North America". Anthropologica. 40 (1): 49–70. doi:10.2307/25605872. JSTOR 25605872.
  29. ^ Springer, Chris; Lepofsky, Dana; Blake, Michael (2018). "Obsidian in the Salish Sea: An Archaeological Examination of Ancestral Coast Salish Social Networks in SW British Columbia and NW Washington State". Journal of Anthropological Archaeology. 51: 45–66. doi:10.1016/j.jaa.2018.04.002. S2CID 149550628.
  30. ^ Kuhnlein, Harriet V., Turner, Nancy J. (1991). Traditional Plant Foods of Canadian Indigenous Peoples: Nutrition, Botany and Use. Philadelphia: Gordon and Breach. p. 13. ISBN 2881244653.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  31. ^ MacDougall, Andrew S.; Beckwith, Brenda R.; Maslovat, Carrina Y. (Spring 2004). "Defining Conservation Strategies with Historical Perspectives: A Case Study from a Degraded Oak Grassland Ecosystem". Conservation Biology. 18 (2): 455–465. Bibcode:2004ConBi..18..455M. doi:10.1111/j.1523-1739.2004.00483.x. S2CID 86686044.

Further reading edit

  • Brisland, Richard T. W. Camas processing or upland hunting : an interpretation of lithic scatters at High Prairie. Calgary, Alb.: University of Calgary, 1992. Thesis (M.A.)
  • Comber, Harold F.; Miller, Murray. Check list of the plants of the Camassia Natural Area : vascular plants. [Oregon]: Oregon Chapter, The Nature Conservancy, 1967
  • Coville, Frederick V. (1897). The technical name of the camas plant. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington 11: 61-65.
  • Gould, Frank W. A systematic treatment of the genus Camassia Lindl. Notre Dame, Ind.: University Press, 1942.
  • Konlande, J. E.; Robson, John R. (1972). The nutritive value of cooked camas as consumed by Flathead Indians. Ecology of food and nutrition 2: 193-195.
  • Maclay, Anne M. Studies of the life history of Camassia quamash (Pursh) Greene. Pullman, Wash., State College of Washington (Washington State University), 1928. Thesis (M.S.)
  • Rice, Peter M.; Toney, J. Chris.; Cross, Marcia Pablo. Rehabilitation of camas and bitterroot gathering sites: study plan. [Hamilton, Mont: Bitterroot National Forest: U.S. Forest Service], 1996.
  • Smith, Harriet L. Camas: the plant that caused wars. Lake Oswego, Or.: Smith, Smith and Smith Pub. Co., 1978.
  • Stevens, Michelle L. and Darris, Dale C. . Plant Materials Technical Note No. 25. (June 16, 2000) U.S. Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Service, Portland, Oregon, 2000.
  • Stevens, Michelle L. and Darris, Dale C. . Plant Materials Technical Note No. 23 (September 1999). U.S. Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Service, Portland, Oregon, 1999
  • Storm, Linda. 2000
  • Statham, Dawn Stram. Camas and the Northern Shoshoni: a biogeographic and socioeconomic analysis. Boise, Idaho: Boise State University, 1982.
  • Thoms, Alston V. The northern roots of hunter-gatherer intensification: camas and the Pacific Northwest. Pullman, Wash.: Thesis (Ph. D.)--Washington State University, 1989.
  • Toney, J. Chris. Traditional plant restoration: restoration of camas & bitterroot gathering sites (phase I-year 1 progress report). [Hamilton, Mont: Bitterroot National Forest: U.S. Forest Service], 1997

External links edit

  • Camassia from Flora of North America
  • at Washington State University
  • - Nature Conservancy
  • - Nature Conservancy
  • Camas Prairie in Idaho from the National Park Service
  • from the Washington Department of Transportation
  • Native Plants of the Great Lakes from the U.S. EPA
  • Southeastern Rare Plant Information Network - SERPIN
  • from the Native Plant Information Network

camassia, plants, called, death, camas, deathcamas, melanthieae, genus, plants, asparagus, family, native, north, america, common, names, include, camas, quamash, indian, hyacinth, camash, wild, hyacinth, citation, needed, indian, camas, quamash, scientific, c. For the plants called death camas or deathcamas see Melanthieae Camassia is a genus of plants in the asparagus family native to North America Common names include camas quamash Indian hyacinth camash and wild hyacinth citation needed CamassiaIndian camas Camassia quamash Scientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade MonocotsOrder AsparagalesFamily AsparagaceaeSubfamily AgavoideaeGenus CamassiaLindl Type speciesCamassia quamash Pursh GreeneSynonyms 1 Stilla W Young Cyanotris Raf Bulbedulis Raf Kweetla Raf Lemotrys Raf Quamasia Raf Sitocodium Salisb Cusick s camas Camassia cusickii Common camas Camassia quamash ssp quamash It grows in the wild in great numbers in moist meadows They are perennial plants with basal linear leaves measuring 20 to 80 centimetres 8 to 32 in in length which emerge early in the spring They grow to a height of 30 to 130 cm 12 to 50 in with a multi flowered stem rising above the main plant in summer The six petaled flowers vary in color from pale lilac or white to deep purple or blue violet Camas can appear to color entire meadows when in flower Contents 1 Taxonomy and species 1 1 Species 1 2 Synonyms 2 Cultivation and uses 2 1 Indigenous methods of cultivation 2 2 Food use 2 3 Ornamental use 3 Place names 4 Role in indigenous trade and culture 5 Theories of anthropogenic dispersal 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksTaxonomy and species editHistorically the genus was placed in the lily family Liliaceae when this was very broadly defined to include most lilioid monocots 2 When the Liliaceae was split in some treatments Camassia was placed in a family called Hyacinthaceae now the subfamily Scilloideae 3 DNA and biochemical studies have led the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group to reassign Camassia to the family Asparagaceae subfamily Agavoideae 4 Species edit The World Checklist of Selected Plant Families recognizes six species as of April 2015 update 1 5 6 Camassia angusta Engelm amp A Gray Blank prairie camas southern Great Plains mid Mississippi Valley Texas Oklahoma Louisiana Arkansas Missouri Kansas Iowa Illinois Indiana Camassia cusickii S Watson Cusick s camas northeastern Oregon west central Idaho Camassia howellii S Watson Howell s camas southwestern Oregon Camassia leichtlinii Baker S Watson large camas great camas British Columbia Washington Oregon northern central California Washoe County in Nevada Camassia quamash Pursh Greene quamash Indian camas small camas western Canada British Columbia Alberta western United States California Oregon Washington Nevada Idaho Montana Wyoming Utah Camassia scilloides Raf Cory Atlantic camas bear grass eastern Central North America from Maryland to Georgia westward to Texas and north into Ontario formerly included 1 The name Camassia biflora was coined in 1969 7 for a South American species now known as Oziroe biflora 8 Synonyms edit The term Camassia esculenta is a confusing one Not an accepted name it has been used twice both for Camassia quamash and for Camassia scilloides Consequently the reference to Camassia esculenta Ker Gawl B L Rob 9 as a synonym for C scilloides is deemed illegitimate 10 while reference to Camassia esculenta Nutt Lindl 11 is a non accepted name synonym for C quamash subsp quamash 12 Hence the continuing horticultural usage without qualification is potentially confusing 13 Cultivation and uses editIndigenous methods of cultivation edit Indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest engaged in active management and cultivation of blue camas Kweetla They used controlled burning to clear land and improve growing conditions While blue camas plots occurred naturally in the Pacific Northwest Indigenous peoples would maintain a plot through weeding tilling harvesting Camas bulbs and replanting Camas plots were harvested by individuals or kin groups who were recognized as a particular plot s cultivators or stewards 14 15 16 Stewardship was typically lineage based and cultivation rights to a particular plot were fiercely guarded Multiple generations would often harvest the same Camas plot Plots have been recorded as possessing physical boundary markers and there were social consequences for harvesting from a plot that was recognized as being maintained by a particular individual or kin group 15 16 The camas bulbs were harvested with a pointed wooden tool with the work of cultivation being done primarily by women 17 Food use edit Camassia species were an important food staple for Indigenous peoples and settlers in parts of the American Old West While Camassia species are edible and nutritious the white flowered deathcamas species which are not in the genus Camassia but in a number of genera in the tribe Melanthieae that grow in the same areas are toxic and the bulbs are quite similar in appearance It is easiest to tell the plants apart when they are in flower The quamash was a food source for many indigenous peoples in western North America Blue camas was harvested when in bloom in spring or early summer 18 After being harvested the bulbs were pit roasted or boiled A pit cooked camas bulb can take up to two days to fully cook The look and taste is something like baked sweet potato but sweeter and with more crystalline fibers due to the presence of inulin in the bulbs The eating of too many such baked bulbs especially if undercooked can cause excessive flatulence due to their containing inulin and other oligosaccharides 19 20 After cooking the bulbs could be pounded into a paste and made into cakes 21 Native American peoples who ate camas include the Nez Perce Nimiipuu Cree Kalapuya Blackfoot Yakama and Coast Salish including the Lekwungen or Songhees who collected camas in what is now Victoria British Columbia the Lekwungen name for which was Camosun or place to gather camas 22 The Kutenai called the camas xapi Ktunaxa 23 Camas bulbs contributed to the survival of members of the Lewis and Clark Expedition 24 In the Great Basin expanded settlement by whites accompanied by turning cattle and hogs onto camas prairies greatly diminished food available to native tribes and increased tension between Native Americans and settlers and travelers 25 Though the once immense citation needed spreads of camas lands have diminished because of modern developments and agriculture numerous camas prairies and marshes may still be seen today Ornamental use edit This bulbflower naturalizes well in gardens The bulb grows best in well drained soil high in humus It will grow in lightly shaded forest areas and on rocky outcrops as well as in open meadows or prairies Additionally it is found growing alongside streams and rivers The plants may be divided in autumn after the leaves have withered Bulbs should be planted in the autumn Additionally the plant spreads by seed rather than by runners Place names editMany areas in the Pacific Northwest are named for the plant including Camas Valley Oregon the city of Camas Washington Lacamas Creek in southern Washington 26 the Camas Prairie in northern Idaho and its Camas Prairie Railroad Camas County in southern Idaho 27 and Kamas Utah Role in indigenous trade and culture editCamas was an important component of the diets of most indigenous groups located in the Pacific Northwest However not all indigenous groups harvested camas themselves Instead many relied on trade in order to procure it Indigenous groups that lived in environments that suited camas production such as the Coast Salish developed networks of exchange in order to procure a variety of goods and foods such as cedar bark baskets and dried halibut 28 In North American Indigenous cultures trade had economic as well as diplomatic functions with ceremonies such as the potlatch serving as a means to legitimize an individual s rule and establish their status as a provider 29 Camas was frequently traded in large volumes for such occasions 30 Theories of anthropogenic dispersal editAs indigenous land management techniques have been theorized as having had a significant impact on the maintenance of the Garry oak ecosystem 31 one of the primary ecosystems in which Camassia quamash grows researchers have investigated the potentiality of anthropogenic transport through an investigation of the genetic structure of Camassia quamash 18 Despite historical evidence for anthropogenic maintenance of camas plots and transportation through Indigenous trade networks 28 analysis of the genetic structures of Camassia quamash have not substantiated theories of anthropogenic dispersal The distribution of Camassia quamash across the Pacific Northwest is most likely the result of postglacial migration These results imply that the degree of anthropogenic dispersal of Camassia quamash that occurred was not of such a scale as to leave a marker in the plant s genetic structure 18 References edit a b c World Checklist of Selected Plant Families The Board of Trustees of the Royal Botanic Gardens Kew retrieved 2015 04 10 Ranker Tom A amp Hogan Tim Camassia retrieved 2012 05 16 in Flora of North America Editorial Committee ed 1982 Flora of North America online eFloras org Fernandez A Davina J R 1991 Heterochromatin and Genome Size in Fortunatia and Camassia Hyacinthaceae Kew Bulletin 46 2 307 316 doi 10 2307 4110602 JSTOR 4110602 Stevens P F Angiosperm Phylogeny Website Asparagales Agavoideae The Plant List Biota of North America Progran 2013 county distribution maps Cocucci Alfredo Elio 1969 Kurtziana 5 184 Speta Franz 1998 Phyton Annales Rei Botanicae 38 56 Rhodora 10 31 1908 World Checklist of Selected Plant Families Camassia esculenta Ker Gawl B L Rob Edwards s Bot Reg 18 t 1486 1832 World Checklist of Selected Plant Families Camassia esculenta Nutt Lindl Dig Drop Done Lepofsky Dana Lyons Natasha Autumn 2013 The Secret Past Life of Plants Paleoethnobotany in British Columbia BC Studies 179 39 72 via ProQuest a b Kuhnlein Harriet V Turner Nancy J 1991 Traditional Plant Foods of Canadian indigenous Peoples Nutrition Botany and Use Philadelphia Gordon and Breach p 12 ISBN 2881244653 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Turner Nancy J Autumn 2013 Plant Management Systems of British Columbia s First Peoples BC Studies 179 106 256 via ProQuest Brown R 1868 On the Vegetable Products used by the North West American Indians as Food and Medecine in the Arts and in Superstitious Rites Transactions of the Botanical Society 9 378 396 a b c Tomimatsu Hiroshi Kephart Susan R Vellend Mark 2009 Phylogeography of Camassia quamash in western North America postglacial colonization and transport by indigenous peoples Molecular Ecology 18 18 3918 3928 Bibcode 2009MolEc 18 3918T doi 10 1111 j 1365 294X 2009 04341 x PMID 19732332 S2CID 14031676 Plant Spotlights PDF Appreciating Common Camas Camassia quamash during Native Plant Appreciation Week Freedman Robert Louis 1976 Native North American Food Preparation Techniques Boletin Bibliografico de Antropologia Americana 1973 1979 Pan American Institute of Geography and History 38 47 130 131 JSTOR 43996285 s v Camas Salish About Us Retrieved 2022 02 17 FirstVoices Ktunaxa Plants food plants words Retrieved 2012 07 07 Hunter Frances Nearly all the men Sick Lewis and Clark meet the Camas Root in Frances Hunter s American Heroes Blog 1 Accessed 2016 3 24 The Shoshoni Frontier and the Bear River Massacre Brigham D Madsen foreword by Charles S Peterson University of Utah Press 1985 paperback 1995 trade paperback 286 pages ISBN 0 87480 494 9 Majors Harry M 1975 Exploring Washington Van Winkle Publishing Co p 120 ISBN 978 0 918664 00 6 Idaho gov Camas County Archived November 20 2011 at the Wayback Machine accessed 2009 06 06 a b Turner Nancy J Loewen Dawn C 1998 The Original Free Trade Exchange of Botanical Products and Associated Plant Knowledge in Northwestern North America Anthropologica 40 1 49 70 doi 10 2307 25605872 JSTOR 25605872 Springer Chris Lepofsky Dana Blake Michael 2018 Obsidian in the Salish Sea An Archaeological Examination of Ancestral Coast Salish Social Networks in SW British Columbia and NW Washington State Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 51 45 66 doi 10 1016 j jaa 2018 04 002 S2CID 149550628 Kuhnlein Harriet V Turner Nancy J 1991 Traditional Plant Foods of Canadian Indigenous Peoples Nutrition Botany and Use Philadelphia Gordon and Breach p 13 ISBN 2881244653 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link MacDougall Andrew S Beckwith Brenda R Maslovat Carrina Y Spring 2004 Defining Conservation Strategies with Historical Perspectives A Case Study from a Degraded Oak Grassland Ecosystem Conservation Biology 18 2 455 465 Bibcode 2004ConBi 18 455M doi 10 1111 j 1523 1739 2004 00483 x S2CID 86686044 Further reading editBrisland Richard T W Camas processing or upland hunting an interpretation of lithic scatters at High Prairie Calgary Alb University of Calgary 1992 Thesis M A Comber Harold F Miller Murray Check list of the plants of theCamassiaNatural Area vascular plants Oregon Oregon Chapter The Nature Conservancy 1967 Coville Frederick V 1897 The technical name of the camas plant Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington 11 61 65 Gould Frank W A systematic treatment of the genusCamassiaLindl Notre Dame Ind University Press 1942 Konlande J E Robson John R 1972 The nutritive value of cooked camas as consumed by Flathead Indians Ecology of food and nutrition 2 193 195 Maclay Anne M Studies of the life history ofCamassia quamash Pursh Greene Pullman Wash State College of Washington Washington State University 1928 Thesis M S Rice Peter M Toney J Chris Cross Marcia Pablo Rehabilitation of camas and bitterroot gathering sites study plan Hamilton Mont Bitterroot National Forest U S Forest Service 1996 Smith Harriet L Camas the plant that caused wars Lake Oswego Or Smith Smith and Smith Pub Co 1978 Stevens Michelle L and Darris Dale C Plant Guide for Common Camas Ethnobotany Culture Management and Use Plant Materials Technical Note No 25 June 16 2000 U S Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Service Portland Oregon 2000 Stevens Michelle L and Darris Dale C Ethnobotany Culture and Use of Great Camas Camassia quamash ssp quamash Plant Materials Technical Note No 23 September 1999 U S Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Service Portland Oregon 1999 Storm Linda Patterns and Processes of Indigenous Burning 2000 Statham Dawn Stram Camas and the Northern Shoshoni a biogeographic and socioeconomic analysis Boise Idaho Boise State University 1982 Thoms Alston V The northern roots of hunter gatherer intensification camas and the Pacific Northwest Pullman Wash Thesis Ph D Washington State University 1989 Toney J Chris Traditional plant restoration restoration of camas amp bitterroot gathering sites phase I year 1 progress report Hamilton Mont Bitterroot National Forest U S Forest Service 1997External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Camassia nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Camassia nbsp Look up camassia in Wiktionary the free dictionary Camassia from Flora of North America Camas Meadows at Washington State University Camassia Natural Area Oregon Nature Conservancy Camassia Slopes Preserve North Carolina Nature Conservancy Camas Prairie in Idaho from the National Park Service Camassia from the Washington Department of Transportation Native Plants of the Great Lakes from the U S EPA Southeastern Rare Plant Information Network SERPIN Camassia from the Native Plant Information Network Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Camassia amp oldid 1192127620, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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