The Cahokian Crucible: Burning Ritual and the Emergence of Cahokian Power in the Mississippian Midwest

2019 ◽  
Vol 84 (3) ◽  
pp. 438-470 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melissa R. Baltus ◽  
Gregory D. Wilson

Much of what is known about the Indigenous city of Cahokia, located in and influential on the North American midcontinent during the eleventh through fourteenth centuries AD, derives from decades of salvage, research, and CRM excavations in the surrounding American Bottom region. We use this robust dataset to explore patterns of building conflagration that suggest these practices of burning were part of pre-Mississippian traditions that were bundled into new Cahokian landscapes during the early consolidation of the city. These bundled practices entangled sources of power that were at once political and religious, thus transforming the practices and meanings associated with terminating building use via fire.

1985 ◽  
Vol 28 (3) ◽  
pp. 575-596 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philip Lawson

This was how the Public Advertiser greeted the passage of the Quebec Act through parliament in June 1774. It was a remarkable transformation from the ecstasy evident in newspaper reports that greeted the fall of New France in 1760. As early as November 1759 the city of Nottingham singled out the North American campaign as the glorious core of British strategy. Its loyal address congratulated the king ‘particularly upon the defeat of the French army in Canada, and the taking of Quebec; an acquisition not less honourable to your majesty's forces, than destructive of the trade and commerce and power of France in North America’. What occurred in those fourteen years to produce such a stark revision of views on the conquest of New France? The answer can be found partly by surveying the English press for this period. During these years, treatment of Canadian issues in the press displayed quite distinct characteristics that revealed a whole range of attitudes and opinions on the place Canada held in the future of the North American empire. No consensus on this issue ever existed. Debate on Canada mirrored a wider discussion on the future of the polyglot empire acquired at the end of the Seven Years War in 1763. In ranged from the enthusiasm of officials at Westminster to spokesmen of a strain in English thinking that challenged the whole thrust of imperial policy to date.


2013 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 38-64 ◽  
Author(s):  
David B. Hanna

Montreal's "terrace townscape" emerged in the 1850s and 1860s and has since disappeared. It represented a conjuncture of forces peculiar to Montreal among British North American cities. The terrace — the uniting of a homogeneous group of attached houses behind a single monumental facade — concentrated on a plateau, between the older city to the south and the high-prestige homes on the slope to the north. Such housing flowed, in one sense, from the speculative development of wealthy landowners. The developnent was driven by the growth of the city and the concurrent housing boom of the 1850s and 1860s, coupled with the desire of the better classes to move from the noisome, dangerous and constricted older areas. Improvements in the urban infra-structure, especially the construction of water-works, made new development on higher lands feasible. The "terrace" form or fashion also derived from an architecturally and socially acceptable formula, rooted in British precedents, especially those of prestigious London. It was, finally, a form or fashion that was "indubitably linked with a strong upper middle class sector of the population" found only in administrative and commercial cities, and in British North Anerica found only in sufficient strength in Montreal.


2018 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
pp. 00005
Author(s):  
Anastasiya Belanova ◽  
Ludmila Chindyaeva

Naturalization of the North American species Prunus pensylvanica has been revealed in Novosibirsk for the first time. This species was introduced in the city in the middle of the last century. It naturally regenerates vegetatively in the area of landscape objects and in dedrological collections and gives self-seeding. In local conditions it is characterized by fast growth, short pregenerative period, presence of abundant uneven-aged progeny, high vegetative mobility, and local population-forming ability.


1991 ◽  
Vol 57 (2) ◽  
pp. 345
Author(s):  
Richard J. Ingersoll ◽  
William H. Wilson

2017 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 32
Author(s):  
S.V. Pushkin ◽  
E. G. Mishvelov

In 2009 we for the first time found a look in a neighborhood of the city of Geledzhik. Still this look wasn't specified for t he territory of Russia, but also Palearktiki as a whole. In 2013 this look was noted repeatedly. I t testifies about not accidents of detection. The species is resulted for the first time for Russia and will be included in base Zoological institute the Russian Academy of Sciences (www.zin.ru/ANIMALIA/COLEOPTERA/eng/atl_elat.htm) 


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 351-370
Author(s):  
Oksana I. Yasinskaya ◽  
Marina V. Kostina ◽  
Natalya S. Barabanshchikova

The North American ash-leaved maple is one of the most dangerous invasive species in Russia. However, due to the high seed production and the ability to grow in the environmentally unfriendly territories, it spread widely in Moscow, forming the tangle of tilted and curved trees, which are not much decorative. The rapid reduction of the ash-leaved maple population may exacerbate the adverse environmental situation in the city. The study of the species’ biomorphological features, as well as the consequences of the spontaneous pruning performed by the landscapers, makes it possible to issue recommendations on adjusting the crowns of curved and tilted trees, multi-stem trees, as well as on improving the appearance of tangles. Thanks to the dormant buds, Acer negundo easily tolerates the most radical variants of rejuvenating pruning, allowing to reduce the crown of trees to a height of 3–4 m, to form low-growing trees with a height of 1.5–2 m, as well as living thickets, to correct the crown of tilted and bent trees by shortening the trunk to a powerful shoot arising on the trunk from a dormant bud, and removing, in case of a bifurcation of the trunk, the most deflected trunk.


2006 ◽  
Vol 175 (4S) ◽  
pp. 511-512
Author(s):  
David G. McLeod ◽  
Ira Klimberg ◽  
Donald Gleason ◽  
Gerald Chodak ◽  
Thomas Morris ◽  
...  

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