Indigenous Land Management Resources

bison skeleton in museum

By Madeline Peterson, Anoka Field Crew Leader / AmeriCorps Member

 

November is Native American Heritage Month! For my blog post this month, I wanted to highlight some resources about Indigenous land management, fire use, and culture that I have found helpful this year.

As a non-Indigenous person doing natural resource work on native land, I felt it was important for me to research Indigenous perspectives on land management and prescribed fire during my service term. Long drives to project sites were a great opportunity for me to listen to podcasts and audiobooks.

The following are some podcasts, videos, books, and museum exhibits that I learned from this year.

 

display map in a museum
A map of the Mississippi river and an interpretive display about Minnesota place names at the Coon Rapids Dam Visitor Center
[Image Description] A short display with a painted 3D map showing the river and information text and labels on the sides.

Podcasts and Videos about Fire and Land Management

Good Fire Podcast

The Good Fire podcast explores fire as a tool for ecological and cultural well-being. I have listened to the first nine episodes, and I love the range of guests they bring on the podcast. The hosts are from Canada, but they feature guests from Australia and South America, zooming out from North America to provide a wider perspective on cultural burns.

 

Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community Land and Natural Resources Department Video

As part of a service project, central district field crews and IDEC fellows watched a video about the Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community’s (SMSC) Land and Natural Resources department. This twenty-minute video was a fascinating view into the values of the community, and I found the green infrastructure segment especially inspiring.

 

Museums Showcasing Art and Language

Hoċokata Ti

Central district field crews and IDEC fellows got the opportunity to tour the public exhibits in the SMSC cultural center, Hoċokata Ti. The SMSC website describes it as a “gathering space that is used to interpret and encourage traditional Mdewakanton Dakota cultural heritage, language, and history by sustaining this inherent knowledge for SMSC Members through exhibitions, preservation, and education.”

 

SMSC Minnesota Place Names

Growing up, I never knew how many place names in Minnesota were from Dakota and Ojibwe words. Here are some videos by SMSC about Dakota place names in Minnesota:

Dakota Place Names in Minnesota – Native American Heritage Month

2021 Native American Heritage Month – Dakota Place Names in Minnesota – Part 2

 

Science Museum of Minnesota

The Science Museum of Minnesota’s exhibit We Move and We Stay features stories, music, and art pieces from the Dakota and Ojibwe people. Like the SMSC video, part of the exhibit focuses on city and county place names of Native American origin.

 

bison skeleton in museum
A bison skeleton with a small red pouch on one hoof containing a tobacco offering.

 

Minneapolis Institute of Art

The Minneapolis Institute of Art has a collection of native art that can be viewed in person or online, including a virtual tour with a focus on the Dakota and the Anishinaabe.

 

art on gallery wall
Pieces from Virgil Ortiz: Convergence, an exhibit at the Minneapolis Institute of Art
[Image Description] Black and white art pieces on a gallery wall.

Books on Ethnobotany and Indigenous Perspectives

The following books introduced me to ethnobotany, the study of how a particular culture and region makes use of native plants. The Sioux Chef’s Indigenous Kitchen focuses on recipes, with asides describing the cultural significance of certain ingredients. Iwígara is an encyclopedia of commonly used North American plants and their history with particular Indigenous groups. Braiding Sweetgrass and Gathering Moss are collections of essays that describe the author’s relationship to Traditional Ecological Knowledge and how it is sometimes at odds with western science, both of her books contain a call to work together for a sustainable and respectful future.

 

  • The Sioux Chef’s Indigenous Kitchen by Sean Sherman
  • Iwígara by Enrique Salmón
  • Braiding Sweetgrass and Gathering Moss by Robin Wall Kimmerer