Dates
Missions
Gold Rush
20th Century
21st Century
100

When was the great fire that changed how we manage our forests and wildfire?

1910

100

Did Rancherias use burning in 1800s?

  1. Used burning! (lower FRI still) to manage brush or encourage grass

  2. Created destructive fires!- did not know or care how to control

100

What was the fire regime of the Sierra Nevada region before 1800s?

-common plants exhibit specific fire-adapted traits such as thick bark and fire-stimulated flowering, sprouting, seed release and/or germination

- FRI of less than 50 years/ 250 acres or less 

-Accounts of early surveyors explicitly state that crown fires were uncommon 

100

When was there a big shift in fire policy during this time period? (1900s-1990s)

1900-1930s= conservation laws, federal and state government as land stewards

1930s-1970s= fire suppression!

100

What is one way that Indigenous Peoples are reclaiming their culture?

"Rematriation describes an instance where land, air, water, animals, plants, ideas and ways of doing things and living are purposefully returned to their original natural context–their mother, the great Female Holy Wild"


other?




200

When did it become legal to indenture native peoples by the US government?

1850

200

Name one way that Timbrook, Johnson, and Earle mention that natives used fire for?

hunting: rabbit drives

improve forage for game animals which would then be hunted

increase the availability of certain plants for direct use by humans

200

What is  “Paiute forestry” ?

light burning- prescribed burning

200

Name one land management policy from 1900-1950s.

How did it change management?

1. 1945- Rangeland Improvement Act- state gave permission for private burns to sponsor research and experiment

2. 1935- 10AM policy- fire must be out by the following day at 10AM

3. 1916- establishment of National Park Service

4. 1927- State Park Bill- CA division of beaches and parks- recreation and historical

5. 1933- Civilian Conservation Corps created

6. 1946- The BLM created- that of managing public land for multiple uses while conserving natural, historical, and cultural resources

200

Who is Smokey Bear? How has the campaign changed over time.

USFS mascot!

"Only you can prevent forest fires"

"only you can prevent wildfires"

300

When was the Indian Citizenship Act- granting citizenship to noncitizen Indians born within US territory limits

1924

300

Where was the predominant influence of Spanish missions in California?

the coast!

300

What is the Indian Appropriations Act?

1851

"created the Indian reservation system and provided funds to move Indian tribes onto farming reservations and hopefully keep them under control"

300
Who was Gifford Pinchot?

What did he believe about fire?

Served as the first USFS head and was an advocate for conservation movements. Believed that fire was very dangerous and should not be used!

300

Name two considerations in deciding if fire fuel treatment programs are profitable?

long-term vs short-term

management techniques- complicated

400

When was the Spanish Mission period?

(1769–1823)

400

In the Dart-Newton paper, what did they attribute the collapse of Chumash culture to?

Name one thing

  1. Reduction of native fishing, hunting, gathering, and land management

  2. Increase in spp. of fish, shellfish, and sea mammals

  3. Suppression of fire and culture

  4. Introduction of diseases and pathogens

  5. Depletion of native food sources due to Spanish cattle

400

Name one way Native peoples were assimilated into western culture.

1. clothes

2. dawes act

3. Indian boarding schools

400

Describe the light burning controversy (one phrase)

Debate in early 1900s that debated the use of "cool" fires as a management tool. Often debated between timberman and ranchers.

Who won out?

USFS played around with light burning until they decided in was dangerous around 1910s.

400

According to guest speaker Ron Goode, what is the primary purpose of cultural burning?

culture and life

500

When did CA become a state?

When was the Transcontinental Railroad completed?

Where does this overlap with land management strategies?

CA- 1850

Railroad- 1869

gold rush time period!

500

Name two ways the introduction of European missions changed the landscape (Pyne 2016)

  1. Mission San Juan Capistrano

    1. introduction of pasteurization and feral animals

    2. Introduction of wild oats and mustard- replace native grasses

  2. Rancherias in 1833

    1. Used burning! (lower FRI still) to manage brush or encourage grass

    2. Created destructive fires!- did not know or care how to control

      • Environment: expanded herds, harvest sea otters, sperm whales, wolverine, fisher, marten, mink, river otter, logged oak tree

      • Cattle eat brome, wild rye, clover

500

Name one way land was managed during this time.

1. wildlife- Trapping, trophy hunters, egg collectors

2. ag- Marshes drained, underground water tapped, damns, irrigation, monoculture farming, steam-powered harvesters, global markets

3. hydraulic mining- Forceful jets of water along hillsides, masses of earth washed into sluice boxes to filter gold

4. logging-Lands abandon after cutting, slash fires raged, no reseeding

500

What were the effects of the Great Fire of 1910 on modern fire policy and management? Name two elements

1. kept the government in control of large expanses of forest (movement for privatization)

2. introduced policies such as the 10 o'clock

3. expanded wildfire tasks force and lookout monitoring

4. learned to salvage certain spp. and quality of wood first (spruce and sawtimber)

500

Explain what the 1995 Federal Wildland Fire Management Policy and 2000 National Fire Plan have in common

1. protection of human life as the first priority

2. Wildland fire must be reintroduced into the ecosystem and is an essential process

3. Sound risk management is a foundation for all fire management activities.