Historical Geographical Assessment Of Bison Hunting on the Southern Great Plains in the 1870s
Abstract
The trading posts serve as a general proxy for hunting activities during the bison hide hunt on the Southern Great Plains in the 1870s. The trading posts offer more stability than hunters' camps for broad conclusions about the hide hunt, in particular for identifying the areas of the range utilized during the commercial hide hunt. The approach is an improvised blending of eyewitness accounts and multiple digital map layers. The result is a network of information about bison hunting and trading that identifies two clusters of human activity and which implicates bison presence and movements. The sum of what this study reveals in maps, plus what hunters observed first-hand and documented, and what is known of the study area indicate that the movements of bison fit a pattern of localized dispersion strategy rather than long distance seasonal migration.
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- OSU Theses [15752]