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Visible Bones: Journeys Across Time in the Columbia River Country
Contributor(s): Nisbet, Jack (Author)
ISBN: 1570615241     ISBN-13: 9781570615245
Publisher: Sasquatch Books
OUR PRICE:   $15.26  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: April 2007
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Annotation: In the vast Western territory defined by the Columbia River, historian and naturalist Jack Nisbet tracks the stories and meaning of remains such as a trilobite fossil that points to a tropical prehistoric ecology; the indelible stain of the smallpox pandemic that overcame local native peoples; the remains of Jaco Finlay, a trapper and scout from 200 years ago. Nisbet's poetic style creates an inspired chronicle of this region.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- History | United States - State & Local - Pacific Northwest (or, Wa)
- Nature | Fossils
- Social Science | Anthropology - Physical
Dewey: 979.7
Physical Information: 0.55" H x 5.56" W x 8.18" (0.63 lbs) 256 pages
Themes:
- Cultural Region - Pacific Northwest
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
How can you know a place? Historian and naturalist Jack Nisbet--author of Sources of the River: Tracking David Thompson Across Western North America--looks to the relics of a region to connect the present moment to the distant past. In the vast Western territory defined by the Columbia River, Nisbet tracks the stories and meaning of relics such as a trilobite fossil that points to a tropical prehistoric ecology; the nearly extinct California condor, once the largest thing in the skies, described with amazement by Meriwether Lewis; the indelible stain of the smallpox pandemic that overcame the native peoples of the West; a rare and socially potent strain of indigenous wild tobacco that reveals the presence of vestigial Indian practices; and the remains of one Jaco Finlay, a mixed-blood trapper and scout who seems to have been everywhere in the region two hundred years ago. All of these relics are the visible bones that show how past is present in the Columbia River Country. Together the stories these bones tell lays out a wholly original, hybrid history that connects nature with human endeavor, geography with the passage of time--all contribute to the biography of a place. The arrow of time travels in one direction, and this is usually how history is told: beginning to end. But Jack Nisbet is up to something else: journeys across time through a place, knitting past to present and back again to assemble a portrait of the land that marked the culmination of Lewis & Clark's expedition, that saw the sad end of the Indian Wars with the flight of Chief Joseph, that has offered up fossil proof of mammoth species long extinct. In this western territory, the storied past is much in evidence.