Jon,

I don't really think that most native American utilization had landscape scale 
impacts as took place with the farming and timbering activities after European 
settlement.  Perhaps some of the Mound Builder cultures with large earthworks 
and agricultural base had greater impacts, but still I doubt they were on the 
scale of what took place in the 1800's to 1900's, Maybe on a local scale, but 
not a broad scale.  I do not doubt that there were small patches that were 
managed by fire by native Americans all across the eastern US, or that perhaps 
some other management took place on a scattered basis, but these were small 
impacts compared to the scale of the forests themselves. I can even believe 
that disease could have decimated the populations of native Americans shortly 
after the arrival of European settlers and explorers.  The idea of large scale 
forest management is different story.

I think it is a just a  romantic notion that these forests were being managed 
in any significant scale prior to European settlement.  It is a good story, 
with the proper liberal political sentiment, but it just is not true.  There is 
no reasonable archaeological evidence that any large scale forest management 
was being done in these forest.  There was a strange fad running in the 
archaeological circles when  was in college.  It was the idea of relativism - 
that any interpretation of archaeological evidence is based upon the viewpoint 
of the person making the interpretation. There was no objective reality as 
everything was relative. The only thing that was important was the why, and by 
this philosophy that could not be known. Therefore all interpretations were 
equally valid.   As a physical scientist (with a minor in archaeology) I can 
say without any qualms "What a load of crap!"   This is perhaps one of the 
sources of the idea of larger scale native American managed forest scenarios in 
several popular books.  Things actually happened or did not happen and these 
events left evidence.  We try to interpret what this evidence to the best of 
our ability to try figure out what actually happened..  We may not get the 
interpretations exactly right, but certainly some ideas are better 
interpretations of the past than others.  You can not prove beyond a shadow of 
doubt that some of these fanciful interpretations are wrong, but you certainly 
can say they are extremely unlikely to be correct.

Ed Frank

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