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Bison and People on the North American Great Plains
- A Deep Environmental History
- Narrated by: Chuck Buell
- Length: 11 hrs and 57 mins
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Publisher's summary
The near disappearance of the American bison in the 19th century, is commonly understood to be the result of over-hunting, capitalist greed, and all but genocidal military policy. This interpretation remains seductive because of its simplicity; there are villains and victims in this familiar cautionary tale of the American frontier. But as this volume of groundbreaking scholarship shows, the story of the bison's demise is actually quite nuanced.
Bison and People on the North American Great Plains, brings together voices from several disciplines, to offer new insights on the relationship between humans and animals that approached extinction. Contributors include historians, archaeologists, anthropologists, paleontologists, and Native American perspectives.
This audiobook explores the deep past and examines the latest knowledge on bison anatomy and physiology, how bison responded to climate change (especially drought), and early bison hunters and pre-contact trade. It also focuses on the era of European contact, in particular the arrival of the horse, and some of the first known instances of over-hunting. By the 19th century, bison reached a "tipping point" as a result of new tanning practices, an early attempt at protective legislation, and ventures to introducing cattle as a replacement stock. Bison and People on the North American Great Plains, is a major contribution to environmental history, western history, and the growing field of transnational history.
The audiobook is published by Texas A&M University Press.
"Full of wonderful insights, thoughtful ideas, and fresh concepts." (Paul H. Carlson, author of Deep Time and the Texas High Plains and The Plains Indians).
"The fascinating essays reveal new and reinterpreted evidence, to help readers unravel America's greatest mystery." (Rosalyn LaPier, Author of Invisible Reality).
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That the dog evolved from the wolf is an accepted fact of evolution and history, but the question of how wolf became dog has remained a mystery, obscured by myth and legend. How the Dog Became the Dog posits that dog was an evolutionary inevitability in the nature of the wolf and its human soul mate. The natural temperament and social structure of humans and wolves are so similar that as soon as they met on the trail they recognized themselves in each other.
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Interesting and thorough, but not for everyone
- By N. Rogers on 12-12-11
By: Mark Derr
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Cro-Magnon
- How the Ice Age Gave Birth to the First Modern Humans
- By: Brian Fagan
- Narrated by: James Langton
- Length: 9 hrs and 52 mins
- Unabridged
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Best-selling author Brian Fagan brings early humans out of the deep freeze with his trademark mix of erudition, cutting-edge science, and vivid storytelling. Cro-Magnon reveals human society in its infancy, facing enormous environmental challenges - including a rival species of humans, the Neanderthals. For ten millennia, Cro-Magnons lived side by side with Neanderthals, an encounter that Fagan fills with drama.
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Fact and fiction
- By Paul on 08-12-10
By: Brian Fagan
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1491
- New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus
- By: Charles C. Mann
- Narrated by: Darrell Dennis
- Length: 16 hrs and 17 mins
- Unabridged
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Traditionally, Americans learned in school that the ancestors of the people who inhabited the Western Hemisphere at the time of Columbus' landing had crossed the Bering Strait 12,000 years ago; existed mainly in small nomadic bands; and lived so lightly on the land that the Americas were, for all practical purposes, still a vast wilderness. But as Charles C. Mann now makes clear, archaeologists and anthropologists have spent the last 30 years proving these and many other long-held assumptions wrong.
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Exposes Non-Academic Audience to The Debate Between Ideas of Pre-Colombian America's
- By Christopher on 01-19-17
By: Charles C. Mann
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Coyote America
- A Natural and Supernatural History
- By: Dan Flores
- Narrated by: Elijah Alexander
- Length: 8 hrs and 51 mins
- Unabridged
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Coyote America is both an environmental and a deep natural history of the coyote. It traces both the five-million-year-long biological story of an animal that has become the "wolf" in our backyards and its cultural evolution from a preeminent spot in Native American religions to the hapless foil of the Road Runner. A deeply American tale, the story of the coyote in the American West and beyond is a sort of Manifest Destiny in reverse.
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Very Enjoyable Book, Subject Matter, and Reader
- By John Townsend on 03-17-17
By: Dan Flores
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The Horse, the Wheel, and Language
- How Bronze-Age Riders from the Eurasian Steppes Shaped the Modern World
- By: David W. Anthony
- Narrated by: Tom Perkins
- Length: 18 hrs and 25 mins
- Unabridged
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Roughly half the world's population speaks languages derived from a shared linguistic source known as Proto-Indo-European. But who were the early speakers of this ancient mother tongue, and how did they manage to spread it around the globe? The Horse, the Wheel, and Language solves a puzzle that has vexed scholars for two centuries and recovers a magnificent and influential civilization from the past.
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Excellent
- By Anthony on 08-09-19
By: David W. Anthony
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Lesser Beasts
- A Snout-to-Tail History of the Humble Pig
- By: Mark Essig
- Narrated by: Joe Barrett
- Length: 7 hrs and 18 mins
- Unabridged
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As historian Mark Essig reveals in Lesser Beasts, swine have such a bad reputation for precisely the same reasons they are so valuable as a source of food: they are intelligent, self-sufficient, and omnivorous. What's more, he argues, we ignore our historic partnership with these astonishing animals at our peril.
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Virtuous Carnivors?
- By David on 04-14-16
By: Mark Essig
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The Statues That Walked
- Unraveling the Mystery of Easter Island
- By: Terry Hunt, Carl Lipo
- Narrated by: Joe Barrett
- Length: 6 hrs and 36 mins
- Unabridged
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The monumental statues of Easter Island, both so magisterial and so forlorn, gazing out in their imposing rows over the island’s barren landscape, have been the source of great mystery ever since the island was first discovered by Europeans on Easter Sunday 1722. How could the ancient people who inhabited this tiny speck of land, the most remote in the vast expanse of the Pacific islands, have built such monumental works?
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The "Mystery of Easter Island" remains raveled
- By Diane on 09-14-12
By: Terry Hunt, and others
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Pandora's Seed
- The Unforeseen Cost of Civilization
- By: Spencer Wells
- Narrated by: Spencer Wells
- Length: 6 hrs and 40 mins
- Unabridged
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This new book by Spencer Wells, the internationally known geneticist, anthropologist, author, and director of the Genographic Project, focuses on the seminal event in human history: mankind's decision to become farmers rather than hunter-gatherers.
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Short and unfocused, but often quite interesting.
- By Alan on 06-23-10
By: Spencer Wells
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Encounters at the Heart of the World
- A History of the Mandan People
- By: Elizabeth A. Fenn
- Narrated by: Christine Marshall
- Length: 10 hrs and 32 mins
- Unabridged
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Encounters at the Heart of the World concerns the Mandan Indians, iconic Plains people whose teeming, busy towns on the upper Missouri River were, for centuries, at the center of the North American universe. We know of them mostly because Lewis and Clark spent the winter of 1804-1805 with them, but why don't we know more? Who were they really? In this extraordinary book, Elizabeth A. Fenn retrieves their history by piecing together important new discoveries in archaeology, anthropology, geology, climatology, epidemiology, and nutritional science.
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Well deserved Pulitzer Prize winner!
- By DaveF on 11-10-19
What listeners say about Bison and People on the North American Great Plains
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Anonymous User
- 12-02-22
Best Book on subject
Glad this book is available. It is one of a kind, beginning to end, about Bison, horses, Indians, and the Great American Grassland.
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- quadsman
- 05-27-22
Not At All What I Had Expected
A much different book than I had expected !
But I stuck with it, and found it to be extremely educational, and fascinating !
A much deeper, and much more
in-depth history of the North American Bison than what I was thinking !
Glad I stuck with it and followed it to the end !
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- Jim
- 03-24-18
Buffalo Gone Baby Gone
This book was sparked from an academic conference held on the American Buffalo. Conference members wrote the chapters. They point out that the history of North American bison was re-thought by scholars in the 1990s. The public, however, still believes the animal’s near extinction was government policy to subdue Indians, a 19th century fad for buffalo robes, and shooting parties from the East killing them from trains for fun. Not so, write the professors. In the first place there were never more than 24-29 million animals on the plains—a great number, but not the 60 million or more that is often stated. Weather fluctuations meant some years there were less animals than others. The scholars’ number comes from computing how much graze bison need, the size of the great plains, and the time required to re-grow grass and sedges; 29 million is the maximum number possible. Contrary to popular myth, pre-Columbian Indians killed more bison than they needed each year by running them off cliffs or into corrals in canyons. Archeologists find butchered and un-butchered skeletons at these sites. The animals absorbed such wastage until Indians began hunting them from horseback, in full swing by 1700. Pregnant cows were the main target as they were fattest and sweetest, and this decreased herd numbers. Plains Indians wanted manufactured goods—steel knives, rifles, gunpowder, cloth, blankets, beads, etc. The extra slaughtered buffalo were converted into goods exchanged with merchant traders. Horse mobility coaxed more Indians onto the plains—it’s why Sioux and Cheyenne settled there from the East—all with families to feed and large horse herds that ate the buffalo’s grass. Inevitably, the enormous mass of animals shrank. Indians normally hunted them twice a year, in late fall and again in late Winter. Then in 1821 Canadian mixed-blood Metis moved onto the plains in high summer, with killing parties of several hundred coming every year for decades, manufacturing thousands of pounds of pemmican out of the buffalo for sale to the Hudson Bay Company in Canada, pulling heavy wagons to transport the pemmican back home. There was a terrible draught in the 1840s that reduced the herd still further. By the 1850s Indians noted the buffalo were less plentiful then before. By the 1860s herds had to be searched for. Complete collapse came in the 1870s with some 5,000 market hunters administering the coup de grace. There was never a government policy to wipe buffalo out that any historian has ever unearthed from records—it was buffalo hunters who stated there was to save face. Their market hunting was a business opportunity fueled by a large quantity of cheap raw material that lasted only a handful of years, until the raw material—the buffalo—disappeared. The truth is, according to the book, everybody exploited American bison by killing them. The intensity of harvesting just couldn’t be sustained. That, in the nutshell, is the book.
This is an interesting read/listen that takes into consideration climate, vegetation, bison habits, Great Plains topography, accounts from trustworthy eye-witnesses, and historical records of bison numbers and supplies kept meticulously by the Hudson Bay Company. It is narrated too fast. Slow it down to 75% on your playback device or you’ll miss a lot of information. For persons interested in this era it is well worth the listen.
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4 people found this helpful