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Canadian Mountain Assessment : Walking Together to Enhance Understanding of Mountains in Canada / Graham McDowell [and nine others].

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
McDowell, Graham, author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Mountain ecology--Canada.
Mountain ecology.
Mountains--Canada.
Mountains.
Traditional ecological knowledge.
Traditional ecological knowledge--Canada.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (553 pages)
Edition:
First edition.
Place of Publication:
Calgary, Alberta : University of Calgary Press, [2023]
Summary:
The Canadian Mountain Assessment provides a first-of-its-kind look at what we know, do not know, and need to know about mountain systems in Canada. The assessment is based on insights from First Nations, Métis, and Inuit knowledges of mountains, as well as findings from an extensive assessment of pertinent academic literature. Its inclusive knowledge co-creation approach brings these multiple forms of evidence together in ways that enhance our collective understanding of mountains in Canada, while also respecting and maintaining the integrity of different knowledge systems. The Canadian Mountain Assessment is a text-based document, but also includes a variety of visual materials as well as access to video recordings of oral knowledges shared by Indigenous individuals from mountain areas in Canada. The assessment is the result of over three years of work, during which time the initiative played an important role in connecting and cultivating relationships between mountain knowledge holders from across Canada. It is the outcome of contributions from more than 80 Indigenous and non-Indigenous individuals and contains six chapters: Introduction Mountain Environments Mountains as Homelands Gifts of the Mountains Mountains Under Pressure Desirable Mountain Futures By way of these chapters, the Canadian Mountain Assessment aims to enhance appreciation for the diversity and significance of mountains in Canada, to clarify challenges and opportunities for mountain systems in the country, and to motivate and inform new research, relationships, and actions that support the realization of desirable mountain futures. More broadly, the Canadian Mountain Assessment provides insights into applied reconciliation efforts in a knowledge assessment context and seeks to inspire similar knowledge co-creation efforts in and beyond Canada.
Contents:
Intro
Half Title Page
Title page
Copyright page
Land Acknowledgement
Acknowledgements
Foreword
Executive Summary
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. Mountain Environments
Chapter 3. Mountains as Homelands
Chapter 4. Gifts of the Mountains
Chapter 5. Mountains Under Pressure
Chapter 6. Desirable Mountain Futures
Table of Contents
Chapter 1
1.1 Mountains and Mountain Knowledge in Canada
1.2 Introducing the Canadian Mountain Assessment
1.2.1 Project governance
1.2.2 Visioning
1.2.3 Methodology
1.2.4 Review and revision process
1.2.5 Innovations
1.2.6 Caveats and limitations
1.3 Organisation of Assessment
Chapter 2
2.1 Introduction
2.2 Origins
2.2.1 Plate tectonics: The driving mechanism for mountain building
2.2.2 Ancient orogens of eastern Canada
2.2.3 Younger orogens of western Canada
2.2.4 Ice sheet histories, landscape sculpting, and deglaciation
2.2.5 Gaps and challenges
2.3 Weather and Climate
2.3.1 Air temperature
2.3.2 Precipitation
2.3.3 Mountain wind systems
2.3.4 Gaps and challenges
2.4 Snow, Ice, and Permafrost
2.4.1 Mountain snow
2.4.2 Mountain glaciers
2.4.3 Mountain permafrost
2.4.4 Gaps and challenges
2.5 Water
2.5.1 Mountain flow regimes
2.5.2 Mountain surface hydrological processes
2.5.3 Mountain lakes and reservoirs
2.5.4 Mountain groundwater
2.5.5 Mountain wetlands
2.5.6 Mountain water quality
2.5.7 Hydrological modelling
2.5.8 Gaps and challenges
2.6 Mountain Hazards
2.6.1 Indigenous perspectives on mountain hazards
2.6.2 Hazard types and frequency
2.6.3 Gaps and challenges
2.7 Ecosystems and Biodiversity
2.7.1 Terrestrial mountain ecosystems
2.7.2 Landscape management and disturbances
2.7.3 Mountain biodiversity.
2.7.4 Aquatic ecosystems and biodiversity
2.7.5 Gaps and challenges
2.8 Connections between Mountains and Lowland/Coastal Environments
2.8.1 Upstream movements of air, water, materials, and organisms
2.8.2 Downstream movements of air, water, materials, and organisms
2.8.3 Gaps and challenges
2.9 Conclusions
Chapter 3
3.1 Introduction
3.1.1 Homelands and homes
3.1.2 Conceptual underpinnings
3.2 Stories of Homelands
3.2.1 Stories of creation
3.2.2 Stories of mountain spirits
3.2.3 Mountain place names
3.2.4 Summary: Stories of Homelands
3.3 Mountain Archaeology and the Longevity of Homelands
3.4 Multispecies Literature
3.4.1 Human-animal relationships in mountains
3.4.2 Human-plant relationships in mountains
3.5 Changes to Mountain Homelands
3.5.1 Early colonial presence
3.5.2 Science as colonial tool
3.5.3 Treaties and land access
3.5.4 Parks and protected areas
3.6 Recreation
3.6.1 Place-making through recreation
3.6.2 Recreation and gender
3.6.3 Race and recreation
3.7 Labour
3.7.1 Extraction labour
3.7.2 Incarcerated labour in mountains
3.7.3 Military labour
3.7.4 Built infrastructures
3.7.5 Mountain professionals
3.8 Governance in Contemporary Mountain Spaces
3.8.1 Mountains as borderlands
3.8.2 Indigenous governance in mountain places
3.9 Conclusion
Chapter 4
4.1 Introduction
4.1.1 Gifts and benefits
4.2 Gifts of Identity and Wellbeing
4.2.1 Emotional and physical wellbeing of mountain communities
4.3 Gifts of Art
4.3.1 Mountains as sites of creative inspiration and dialogue
4.3.2 Mountains as sites of art institutions and programs
4.4 Gifts of Teaching and Pedagogy
4.4.1 Storytelling and narrative
4.4.2 Sacredness
4.4.3 Land-based learning and healing.
4.4.4 Challenges to Indigenous-led teaching and learning in Canada
4.5 Gifts of Foods and Medicines
4.5.1 Plants, Fungi, and Medicinal Species
4.5.2 Wildlife
4.5.3 Fisheries
4.6 Gifts of Water
4.6.1 Gifts of freshwater
4.6.2 Gifts of wetlands
4.7 Gift of Mountain Spaces and Terrain for Tourism and Recreation Activities
4.7.1 Nature and adventure tourism economies
4.7.2 Challenges and drawbacks of mountain recreation
4.8 Gifts and Benefits of Forests, Materials, and Energy Sources
4.8.1 Forests
4.8.2 Minerals and hydrocarbons
4.8.3 Sedimentary deposits and quarries
4.8.4 Metallic mineral deposits
4.8.5 Fossil fuels deposits
4.8.6 Renewable energy
4.9 Conclusions
Chapter 5
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Climate Change: Historical Trends and Future Projections
5.2.1 Historical temperature trends
5.2.2 Historical precipitation trends
5.2.3 Caveats and research gaps
5.2.4 Future climate projections
5.2.5 Caveats and research gaps
5.3 Land Cover and Land Use Pressures
5.3.1 Changes in land cover
5.3.2 Changes in land use
5.3.3 Demographic changes
5.4 Resource Development Pressures
5.4.1 Resource extraction and development
5.4.2 Logging pressures
5.4.3 Mining and fossil fuel pressures
5.4.4 Invasive species
5.5 Growing Pressures from Mountain Tourism and Recreation
5.6 Changes in the Governance of Mountain Spaces
5.7 Threats and Impacts from a Changing Cryosphere
5.7.1 Changes in snowpack
5.7.2 Changes to glaciers
5.7.3 Changes in permafrost
5.8 Threats and Impacts from Changing Water Resources
5.8.1 Changes in water supply
5.8.2 Water quality
5.9 Risks and Vulnerability from Changing Mountain Hazards
5.10 Threats and Impacts on Ecosystems
5.10.1 Changes in treeline and shrubification
5.10.2 Changes in stream ecosystems.
5.10.3 Changes in mountain wetlands
5.10.4 Changes in wildlife, human, and more-than-human relations
5.11 Impacts on Socio-Cultural Systems
5.11.1 Threats to Indigenous livelihoods and knowledge systems
5.11.2 Threats to community health and wellbeing
5.11.3 Threats to mountain tourism and recreation
5.12 Adaptation to Changing Pressures
5.13 Conclusions
Chapter 6
6.1 Connectivity
6.2 Elevating Indigenous Knowledges
6.3 Access and Barriers to Relationships
6.4 Humility
6.5 Endings as Beginnings
Appendix I: Contributor Bios
Appendix II: LEARNING CIRCLE Contributions
Appendix III: Map Data.
Notes:
Description based on print version record.
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN:
1-77385-511-5
1-77385-512-3

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