Results 131 to 140 of about 13,723 (191)
A View from Front Lines: Current Status of Four Water Rights Cases [PDF]
Shelton, Brett Lee
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2021
Abstract The origin of Asian American political identity was not in cultural nationalism but in diasporic consciousness, most notably in the concept of solidarity with Third World peoples struggling against imperialism around the globe.
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Abstract The origin of Asian American political identity was not in cultural nationalism but in diasporic consciousness, most notably in the concept of solidarity with Third World peoples struggling against imperialism around the globe.
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Dispatches from Tumultuous Tule Lake
2022This chapter argues that inmates at Tule Lake were especially assertive, compared to other camps, about their identities as US citizens. It demonstrates this by analyzing material published in the Tulean Dispatch Magazine between its opening on May 27, 1942, and July 15, 1943, when the camp converted into a segregation center for “disloyals” and the ...
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The Education of Japanese Americans at Tule Lake, 1942-1946
Pacific Historical Review, 1987Tule Lake Relocation Center was one of ten camps built by the government of the United States for Japanese Americans during World War II. Initially, Tule Lake was not distinguishable from the other nine camps in regard to its origins and major policies. Executive Order 9066, signed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt on February 19, 1942, had authorized
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“The Song of the Stitches”: Factionalism and Feminism at Tule Lake
Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 2010Abstract: This essay is a close feminist reading of “The Song of the Stitches,” what appears to be a silly rhyme that was tucked away in the private papers of anthropologist Rosalie Hankey Wax. Its bizarre and playful imagery, created while Hankey was conducting fieldwork at the Japanese American internment camp at Tule Lake, can be read as a coded ...
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American Antiquity, 2014
AbstractThe geographic and chronological distribution of eyed bone needles in North American Paleoindian sites led Osborn (2014) to propose that these distinctive artifacts date primarily to the Terminal Pleistocene Younger Dryas Cold Event and were essential to making close-fitting clothes needed to survive frigid winter conditions.
Jon M. Erlandson +5 more
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AbstractThe geographic and chronological distribution of eyed bone needles in North American Paleoindian sites led Osborn (2014) to propose that these distinctive artifacts date primarily to the Terminal Pleistocene Younger Dryas Cold Event and were essential to making close-fitting clothes needed to survive frigid winter conditions.
Jon M. Erlandson +5 more
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Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, 2002
Abstract A crater-filling lava lake basalt at The Peninsula tuff cone in northeastern California has features on its base formed by interaction of the basalt with wet hydrovolcanic tuff. A spectrum of features, including elongated, streamlined, flute-shaped lobes, and irregular corrugations, are exposed on the base of the lava lake.
Alexis Lavine, K.R. Aalto
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Abstract A crater-filling lava lake basalt at The Peninsula tuff cone in northeastern California has features on its base formed by interaction of the basalt with wet hydrovolcanic tuff. A spectrum of features, including elongated, streamlined, flute-shaped lobes, and irregular corrugations, are exposed on the base of the lava lake.
Alexis Lavine, K.R. Aalto
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Late Cenozoic lacustrine and climatic environments at Tule Lake, northern Great Basin, USA
Climate Dynamics, 1992Cores of lake sediment to a depth of 334 m in the town of Tulelake, Siskiyou County, northern California, document the late Cenozoic paleolimnologic and paleoclimatic history of the northwestern edge of the Great Basin. The cores have been dated by radiometric, tephrochronologic and paleomagnetic analyses. Lacustrine diatoms are abundant throughout the
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The late Cenozoic diatom stratigraphy and paleolimnology of Tule Lake, Siskiyou Co. California
Journal of Paleolimnology, 1991Lacustrine diatoms are diverse, well preserved and abundant in cores of lake sediment to 334 m depth near the town of Tulelake, Siskiyou County, northern California. The cores have been dated by radiometric, tephrochronologic and paleomagnetic techniques, which indicate a basal age of about 3 million years (Ma) and a nearly continuous depositional ...
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