07

American Indian Seasonal Round

BEAVER BOARD INFORMATION


American Indians have occupied portions of the northern Great Basin for 10,000 years. The region’s earliest inhabitants lived in caves and camps along the shores of glacial lakes and marshes. This area was the homeland of the ‘Wada-tika’ (wada seed eaters), a band of the Northern Paiute Indians. They often camped near this site between Malheur and Harney lakes called ‘The Narrows,’ and collected seeds from the seepweed (Suaeda sp.) or ‘wada’ plant growing along the shoreline.

Like their ancestors, the band still uses this region as a ‘seasonal round’ – harvesting different resources at various locations throughout the year.  Hunting, fishing, and the gathering of roots, seeds and berries dictated cycles of travel, harvest, and food preservation for this region’s original residents. In spring they moved from the camas meadows in the valleys to gather bitterroot in the foothills. Local lakes and marshes provided a constant supply of waterfowl, while the Malheur River and tributaries provided salmon and other fish. They continued up to the high country to hunt and pick berries. By late fall they returned to the valleys to prepare for winter.

FACT BLOCK

LOCATION:
Narrows
Harney COUNTY

GPS COORDINATES:
43.29832,-118.97442

OTIC TOPIC:
Indian Tribes

beaver board text CODED AS:
NO WHITE SUPREMACY ACKNOWLEDGMENT
-
MULTICULTURAL

published online:
september 12, 2011
08

Ancient Indian Fishing Grounds

BEAVER BOARD INFORMATION

Before a network of dams controlled the Columbia River it was often a raging torrent. Here at Wyam Falls, known today as Celilo Falls, a vertical drop of more than 20 feet and sheer basalt bluffs on either shore forced the river into seething, boiling rapids.

From time immemorial this region comprised the fishing grounds of all Indian tribes of the middle Columbia River area. Early Indians speared huge salmon while standing on the the rocks and their descendants built platforms over the rushing waters from which they gathered fish in long-handled nets. These fishing grounds and the right to take fish from the Columbia River were reserved in 1855 treaties between the tribes and the United States.

Dam construction, which began in the 1930s, forever altered the river’s character. When The Dalles Dam was completed in 1957, the storage basin behind it filled in above the falls and inundated the fishing grounds. Treaty reserved fishing rights, however, continue to be exercised by Indian people in the middle Columbia River area. The loss of Wyam Falls did not mean the loss of the Indian way of life.

FACT BLOCK

LOCATION:
Fairbanks
Wasco COUNTY

GPS COORDINATES:
45.65006,-120.96059

OTIC topic:
Indian Tribes

board SPONSORED BY:
OTIC & ODOT

beaver board text CODED AS:
NO WHITE SUPREMACY ACKNOWLEDGMENT
-
MULTICULTURAL
09

Applegate Trail

BEAVER BOARD INFORMATION

Applegate Trail Ferry Crossing at the Klamath River
Photo: unknown - public domain - 1995
The first emigrant train over the ‘Southern Route’ including more than fifty wagons under the leadership of Captain Levi Scott and David Goff, left the Oregon Trail at Fall Creek or Raft River on the Snake River, August 10, 1846. The Klamath River was crossed eight miles upstream from this sign on October 4, 1846. This trail, roughly 680 miles, took fifty-six days of travel. Captain Scott, leading the second emigrant train, found a new Klamath River crossing one-half mile north of this sign, Oct. 11, 1847. This remained the chief ford of the area until Brown’s Ferry was established here in 1868.

FACT BLOCK

LOCATION:
Keno
Klamath COUNTY

GPS COORDINATES:
42.13608,-122.02861

OTIC topic:
Historic Routes

beaver board text CODED AS:
NO WHITE SUPREMACY ACKNOWLEDGMENt
-
MULTICULTURAL

published online:
11/12/2011