Ruth Askevold from San Francisco Estuary Institute presents at UCB GIS Day - Nov 18

Wednesday, November 18, 2009 from 5:30 PM to 6:00 PM (PT)

Berkeley, CA


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The Indigenous Mapping Network invites you to attend a presentation at
Berkeley’s Geospatial Innovation Facility GIS Day

"Clues on the Map: Using Historical Maps to
Recreate California Indigenous Landscapes in a GIS"

Ruth Askevold

GIS Analyst, Historical Ecology - San Francisco Estuary Institute

This presentation examines how the Historical Ecology Program at the San Francisco Estuary Institute (SFEI) uses maps in a GIS to reconstruct historical landscapes, and how using these maps can help us understand native land management and landscape conditions at the time of colonization.

Ruth Askevold Poster for IMN at UCB November 18, 2009

Historical maps and narrative accounts of the San Francisco Bay area hold clues about the landscapes inhabited by California's indigenous peoples before Euro-American colonization. But because these maps and descriptions were created to protect colonial interests—and are not simply objective mirrors of what existed—they reflect the biases and perspectives of those who made them. Mapping practices included replacing California's Indian and Spanish/Mexican place names with new place names, imposing township and range lines over natural features, and using precision surveying techniques that replaced more descriptive maps. In this way, cartographers attempted to overwrite tribal environmental and cultural knowledge and impose a new order on the land.

This presentation examines how the Historical Ecology Program at the San Francisco Estuary Institute (SFEI) uses maps in a GIS to reconstruct historical landscapes, and how using these maps can help us understand native land management and landscape conditions at the time of colonization. SFEI’s approach includes georeferencing historical maps and textual data (explorer's narratives, newspaper accounts, and related map attributes) and allows for multiple interpretations of sources, as maps are combined and recombined in a GIS. Through examples from various San Francisco Bay Area watershed-based projects designed to support environmental restoration and management, I show how we can find clues on maps and traces on the land that allow us to consider native land management practices. Additional methods such as interviews with tribal members and large- scale eco-archaeological research are also considered.

http://imnatucb111809.eventbrite.com

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GIS DAY:

For more information see:  http://gif.berkeley.edu/gisday.html

GIS Day 2009 is Organized by the Geospatial Innovation Facility at UC Berkeley and co-hosted by the Bay Area Automated Mapping Association (BAAMA) and Geospatial Innovation Facility (GIF), with support from the Northern California Region of the American Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing (ASPRS).


LOCATION: Mulford Hall, UCB, Berkeley, CA 94720

Mulford Hall is near the intersection of Center and Oxford St., at the northwest corner of the Berkeley campus.  From Mulford’s main entrance, walk straight down the long hall and look for signs.  For an interactive campus map and directions to the UC Berkeley campus please see http://www.berkeley.edu/map and http://www.berkeley.edu/visitors/traveling.html

 

PARKING:

There is a small university run lot on Addison, between Oxford and Shattuck. It is on the north side of the street(NOT in the structure accross the street from it). If you can find a spot here, there is a machine to pay that will give you a ticket to display on your dashboard.

Other parking garages in the City of Berkeley:

Closest garages include Berkeley Way near Shattuck, Center Street near Shattuck (2025 Center Street), and Allston Way near Shattuck (2061 Allston Way). More information can be found at the Berkeley Office of Transportation

Street parking


Some areas around campus are permitted areas where you can park for free for 2 hours only, and then you must move your car or risk getting ticketed. Also, some of these areas are tow-away before 6pm.


Do NOT park on campus without a campus permit. Campus parking is enforced 24-hours-a-day.

BACKGROUND:

The Indigenous Mapping Network at UC Berkeley convenes researchers and students, indigenous community members, human rights groups, conservation organizations, mapping practitioners, technology professionals around indigenous mapping issues.  Mapping approaches include GIS, web, and mobile phone technologies, as well as thought maps, performance, storytelling, and other media.


For more information visit http://indigenousmapping.net or contact Sibyl Diver, student chapter president of Indigenous Mapping Network at Berkeley, sdiver@berkeley.edu or Rosemarie McKeon, IMN board member, rosemarie.mckeon@gmail.com

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When

Wednesday, November 18, 2009 from 5:30 PM to 6:00 PM (PT)

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Where

132 Mulford Hall
U.C. Berkeley
Berkeley CA




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Hosted By

Indigenous Mapping Network

Indigenous Mapping Network (IMN) is a multi-tribal grassroots talking circle that convenes mapping practitioners, indigenous community members, indigenous rights organizations, researchers, and technology professionals to discuss current issues in indigenous/tribal/Native American/Alaska Native/Maori/First Nations peoples mapping.

Mostly, our meetings are intended to create a platform for supporting indigenous mapping collaborations and linking communities with emerging technologies.

Mapping approaches can include thought-maps, performance, materials, as well as GIS, web, and mobile phone technologies. Whatever is needed to tell our story.

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