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CATEGORIES:Category,Public Events,Location,Main Campus
DESCRIPTION:Full title: &quot;Oak Forests as Indigenous Land Legacies: Native American Culture and the Sustainability of Eastern Oak Forests&quot; Some argue that Indigenous land use was negligible and that climatic changes largely explained the changing abundance of oak forests over millennia. Others argue that widespread cultural burning of forests maintained oak and other fire-adapted vegetation. The debate is highly relevant today as oak-dominated forests are failing to regenerate, with significant ecological and economic impacts: understanding drivers of oak forest dynamics can help us manage oak forests sustainably. This talk by Stephen Tulowiecki of SUNY Geneseo introduces this debate and its significance, along with the materials and methods of assessing various factors shaping the geographic distribution of oak forests historically. Drawing examples from local studies of the Finger Lakes region, research suggests that present-day oak forests are perhaps the legacies of past Indigenous land management.
DTSTAMP:20260408T151706
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250325T124500
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250325T134500
LOCATION:Main Campus 
SUMMARY;LANGUAGE=en-us:Oak Forests as Indigenous Land Legacies
UID:5549094ca80119db5f059b03818afc3e@www.flcc.edu
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