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Articles
on Canadian Topics Published in Forest & Conservation History
(1990-1995)
- Evenden, Matthew D. "The
Laborers of Nature: Economic Ornithology and the Role of Birds as Agents
of Biological Pest Control in North American Agriculture, ca. 1880-
1930." Forest & Conservation History 39 (October 1995):
172-183.
- Shultis, John. "Improving
the Wilderness: Common Factors in Creating National Parks and Equivalent
Reserves During the Nineteenth Century." Forest & Conservation
History 39 (July 1995): 121-129. Compares the national park movements
of the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand.
- Ingram, Gordon Brent. "Conserving
Habitat and Biological Diversity: A Study of Obstacles on Gwaii Haanas,
British Columbia." Forest & Conservation History 39
(April 1995): 77-89. Natural resource conservation in the Queen Charlotte
Islands, nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
- Sherrard, William R. "Salt
Brine and Stinkers: The Eddy Family in the Forest Products Industries
of Nineteenth-Century Michigan and Quebec." Forest & Conservation
History 38 (July 1994): 127-134.
- Forkey, Neil S. "Anglers,
Fishers, and the St. Croix River: Conflict in a Canadian-American Borderland,
1867-1900." Forest & Conservation History 37 (October
1993): 179-187. Maine and New Brunswick, Canada.
- Parenteau, Bill. "Bonded
Labor: Canadian Woods Workers in the Maine Pulpwood Industry, 1940-55."
Forest & Conservation History 37 (July 1993): 108-119.
- Hammond, Lorne. "Marketing
Wildlife: The Hudson's Bay Company and the Pacific Northwest, 1821-49."
Forest & Conservation History 37 (January 1993): 14-25. Author
argues that the HBC's trapping and fur trading policies of the nineteenth
century were essentially a primitive and highly successful form of wildlife
management.
- Cox, Thomas R. "The
North America-Japan Timber Trade: The Roots of Canadian and U.S. Approaches."
Forest & Conservation History 34 (July 1990): 112-121. Differences
in government trade policies, since the l880s.
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