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WEBINAR: Native American fire management at an ancient wildland-urban interface Presenter: Chris Roos, Southern Methodist University; Chris Toya and John Galvan, Jemez Pueblo Date: March 4, 2021 12pm MST/1pm CST As residential development continues into flammable landscapes, wildfires increasingly threaten homes, lives, and livelihoods in the wildland–urban interface (WUI). Although this problem seems distinctly modern, Native American communities have lived in WUI contexts for centuries. When carefully considered, the past offers valuable lessons for coexisting with wildfire, climate change, and related challenges. This webinar will show that ancestors of Native Americans from Jemez Pueblo used ecologically savvy intensive burning and wood collection to make their ancient WUI resistant to climate variability and extreme fire behavior. Learning from the past offers modern WUI communities more options for addressing contemporary fire challenges. Public/private–tribal partnerships for wood and fire management can offer paths forward to restore fire-resilient WUI communities.

copyright 2021 Southwest Fire Science Consortium

Media Record Details

Mar 4, 2021
Christopher I. Roos, Chris Toya, John Galvan

Cataloging Information

Topic(s):
Fire & Traditional Knowledge

NRFSN number: 22680
Record updated: