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Preface 1. D. Dagget, Beyond the Rangeland Conflict (Flagstaff, Ariz.: Gibbs-Smith in cooperation with the Grand Canyon Trust, 1995). 1 | The Pleistocene and Holocene Epochs: Prehuman Context 1. D. Grayson, The Desert’s Past: A Natural Prehistory of the Great Basin (Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1993). 2. P.V.Wells and C. D. Jorgensen,“Pleistocene wood rat middens and climatic change in the Mohave Desert: A record of juniper woodlands,” Science 143 (1964): 1171–74. 3.V. C. LaMarche,“Paleoclimatic inferences from long tree-ring records,” Science 183, no. 4129 (1974): 1043–48. 4. Grayson, The Desert’s Past. 5. P. J. Mehringer, “Late-Quaternary pollen records from the interior Pacific Northwest and northern Great Basin of the United States,” in Pollen Records of the LateQuaternary North American Sediments, ed.V. M. Bryant Jr. and R. G. Holloway, pp. 167– 89 (Dallas: American Association of Stratigraphic Palynologists, 1985). 6. P. E. Wigand and P. J. Mehringer Jr.,“Pollen and seed analysis,” in The Archaeology of Hidden Cave, Nevada, ed. H. D. Thomas, pp. 108–24, American Museum of Natural History Anthropological Paper 61, no. 1 (1985). 7. P. E. Wigand and C. L. Nowak,“Dynamics of Northwest Nevada plant communities during the last 30,000 years,” in The History of Water: Eastern Sierra Nevada, Owens Valley, White-Inyo Mountains, ed. C. A. Hall Jr.,V. D. Jones, and B.Widawski, pp. 40–62, White Mountain Research Station Symposium, vol. 4 (1982). 8. Grayson, The Desert’s Past. 9. R. S. Thompson,“Late Quaternary environments in Ruby Valley, Nevada,” Quaternary Research 37 (1992): 1–15. 10. LaMarche,“Paleoclimatic inferences from long tree-ring records.” 11. Grayson, The Desert’s Past. 12. L. V. Bensen, P. A. Meyers, and R. J. Spencer, “Change in the size of Walker Lake during the past 5000 years,” Paleogeography, Paleoclimatology, and Paleoecology 81, nos. 3–4 (1991): 189–214; R. J. Tausch, C. L. Nowak, and S. A. Mensing,“Climate change and associated vegetation dynamics during the Holocene: the paleoecological record,” in Great Basin Riparian Areas: Ecology, Management, and Restoration, ed. J. C. Chambers and J. R. Miller, pp. 24–48 (Covelo,Wash.: Island Press, 2004). 13. Grayson, The Desert’s Past. 14. Tausch and others, “Climate change and associated vegetation dynamics during the Holocene.” Notes 137 138 | Notes to Pages 5–10 15. H. C. Stutz and S. C. Sanderson, “Evolutionary studies of Atriplex: Chromosome races of A. confertifolia (shadscale),” American Journal of Botany 70, no. 10 (1983): 1536–47. 16. Grayson, The Desert’s Past. 17. Ibid. 18. Ibid. 19. Ibid. 20. D. Grayson, Danger Cave, Last Supper Cave, and Hanging Rock Shelter: The Faunas, Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History 66, pt. 1 (1988). 21. Ibid. 22. A. D. Barnosky, P. L. Koch, R. S. Foranec, S. L. Wing, and A. B. Shobel,“Assessing the causes of Late Pleistocene extinctions on the continents,” Science 306 (2004): 70–78. 2 | The First People: Hunters and Gatherers 1. J. D. Jennings and E. Norbeck,“Great Basin prehistory: A review,” American Antiquity 21, no. 1 (1955): 1–11; R. F. Spencer and J. D. Jennings, The Native Americans (New York: Harper and Row, 1965). 2. K. T. Harper,“Historical environments,” in Handbook of North American Indians, vol. 11: Great Basin, ed.W. L. d’Azevedo, pp. 51–63 (Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1986). 3. D. H. Thomas,“Historic and prehistoric land-use patterns at Reese River,” Nevada Historical Society Quarterly 14, no. 4 (1971): 2–9. 4. Ibid. 5. T. W. Canaday and S. E. Reutebuch, “Searching for the past: Aerial photography and alpine archeology on the Toiyabe National Forest,” in Remote Sensing and Ecosystem Management, Proceedings of the Fifth Forest Service Remote Sensing Applications Conference, Portland, Oregon,April 11–15, 1994. 6. J. H. Steward, Basin-Plateau Aboriginal Sociopolitical Groups, Smithsonian Institution Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 120 (Washington D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1938); J. H. Steward,“Cultural element distributions: XIII. Nevada Shoshone,” University of California Anthropologic Records 4, no. 2 (1941): 209–59. 7. P. S. Ogden, Peter Skene Ogden’s Snake River Journals, 1824–25 and 1825–26, ed. E. E. Rich and A. M. Johnson, Hudson’s Bay Record Society Publication 13 (London, 1971). 8. J. Work, John Work’s Field Journal: The Snake Country Expedition of 1830–31, ed. F. D. Haines Jr. (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1971). 9. E. B. Patterson, L. A. Ulph, and V. Goodwin, Nevada’s Northeast...