General Note:
Date from colophon.
"Through their own voices and images of their ancestral lands, you will learn about mapping projects carried out by four indigenous peoples in the western United States: The Kashunamuit people of the Native Village of Chevak, a Cup'ik Eskimo community located in the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta of Alaska; the village of Khap'o Owingeh, also known as Santa Clara Pueblo, in the upper Rio Grande Valley in northern New Mexico; the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes of the Flathead Nation in Montana with aboriginal territory covering the upper reaches of the Missouri and Columbia River Basins; and the Native Hawaiian people of Häÿena on the island of Kauai'i, working through the Hui Makaÿäinana o Makana and the Limahuli Garden and Preserve."--P. 9.
Formatted Contents Note:
Editor's note / by Clay Scott -- Foreword / by Alvin Warren -- Introduction / by Jim Enote -- Village of Chevak -- Limahuli Garden and Preserve in collaboration with the Hui Makaÿäinana o Makana Häÿena, Ahupua'a -- Santa Clara Pueblo - Khap'o Owingeh -- The Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes of the Flathead Nation -- Homeland - connecting and reconnecting -- Tradition and technology -- Aloha Häÿena / Carlos Andrade -- Boundaries are fluid -- Secret knowledge, sacred knowledge -- Regaining land, reclaiming history -- Preservation -- Language is our map -- Places and names, stories and histories -- Living on the land, living off the land -- Culture -- Passing on knowledge -- Challenges -- Common spirits -- Dreams and visions -- The roots of the ICMI / Jaune Evans -- Maps in court / Curtis Berkey -- A world where many fit / Joe Bryan.