“Where the Moose Were”: Fort William First Nation’s Ancestral Land, Two–Eyed Seeing, and Industrial Impacts
A two-eyed seeing approach considered Indigenous knowledge and Western science towards eco–health, reconciliation and land back with Fort William First Nation (FWFN) in Ontario, Canada. To map traditional land use, occupancy, and ecological knowledge, we interviewed 49 FWFN members about their hunti...
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MDPI AG
2024-11-01
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Online Access: | https://www.mdpi.com/2073-445X/13/12/2029 |
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author | Keshab Thapa Melanie Laforest Catherine Banning Shirley Thompson |
author_facet | Keshab Thapa Melanie Laforest Catherine Banning Shirley Thompson |
author_sort | Keshab Thapa |
collection | DOAJ |
description | A two-eyed seeing approach considered Indigenous knowledge and Western science towards eco–health, reconciliation and land back with Fort William First Nation (FWFN) in Ontario, Canada. To map traditional land use, occupancy, and ecological knowledge, we interviewed 49 FWFN members about their hunting, fishing, trapping, plant harvesting, cultural sites, and sacred gatherings on their ancestral land. Their traditional land use and occupancy includes more than 7.5 million ha of their ancestral land. The FWFN members reported many industrial impacts on their reserve and ancestral land. We analyzed the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) change over time on FWFN’s ancestral land and the Thunder Bay Pulp and Paper Mill (TBPP)’s National Pollutant Release Inventory data to investigate the FWFN members’ ecohealth concerns. The NDVI analysis revealed large tracts of degraded FWFN’s ancestral land due to logging areas, mining claims, settlements, and paper mills. Mining claims and greenstone belts occupy a quarter of the FWFN members’ ancestral land. The TBPP mill dumped pollution into the Kaministiquia River upstream and upwind of the FWFN community, exposing FWFN members to kilotons of cancerous and other toxic chemicals each year for over a century. Resource extraction and pollution in Northwestern Ontario negatively impacted the human health and ecosystem integrity of FWFN, requiring reconciliation by restoring damaged land and preventing pollution as the starting point for land back. The first step to land back is ending the environmental racism of the TBPP’s pollution directed downstream and downwind of FWFN and protecting ancestral land against logging, mining, and other extractive industries. |
format | Article |
id | doaj-art-05bcbdc3c96a4e01bb77b3d52d1d97c7 |
institution | Kabale University |
issn | 2073-445X |
language | English |
publishDate | 2024-11-01 |
publisher | MDPI AG |
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spelling | doaj-art-05bcbdc3c96a4e01bb77b3d52d1d97c72024-12-27T14:34:55ZengMDPI AGLand2073-445X2024-11-011312202910.3390/land13122029“Where the Moose Were”: Fort William First Nation’s Ancestral Land, Two–Eyed Seeing, and Industrial ImpactsKeshab Thapa0Melanie Laforest1Catherine Banning2Shirley Thompson3Natural Resources Institute, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB R3T 2N2, CanadaMaawandoon, Fort William First Nation, ON P7J 1B6, CanadaMaawandoon, Fort William First Nation, ON P7J 1B6, CanadaNatural Resources Institute, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB R3T 2N2, CanadaA two-eyed seeing approach considered Indigenous knowledge and Western science towards eco–health, reconciliation and land back with Fort William First Nation (FWFN) in Ontario, Canada. To map traditional land use, occupancy, and ecological knowledge, we interviewed 49 FWFN members about their hunting, fishing, trapping, plant harvesting, cultural sites, and sacred gatherings on their ancestral land. Their traditional land use and occupancy includes more than 7.5 million ha of their ancestral land. The FWFN members reported many industrial impacts on their reserve and ancestral land. We analyzed the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) change over time on FWFN’s ancestral land and the Thunder Bay Pulp and Paper Mill (TBPP)’s National Pollutant Release Inventory data to investigate the FWFN members’ ecohealth concerns. The NDVI analysis revealed large tracts of degraded FWFN’s ancestral land due to logging areas, mining claims, settlements, and paper mills. Mining claims and greenstone belts occupy a quarter of the FWFN members’ ancestral land. The TBPP mill dumped pollution into the Kaministiquia River upstream and upwind of the FWFN community, exposing FWFN members to kilotons of cancerous and other toxic chemicals each year for over a century. Resource extraction and pollution in Northwestern Ontario negatively impacted the human health and ecosystem integrity of FWFN, requiring reconciliation by restoring damaged land and preventing pollution as the starting point for land back. The first step to land back is ending the environmental racism of the TBPP’s pollution directed downstream and downwind of FWFN and protecting ancestral land against logging, mining, and other extractive industries.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-445X/13/12/2029two-eyed seeingIndigenous knowledgeWestern knowledgereconciliationvegetation analysispollution |
spellingShingle | Keshab Thapa Melanie Laforest Catherine Banning Shirley Thompson “Where the Moose Were”: Fort William First Nation’s Ancestral Land, Two–Eyed Seeing, and Industrial Impacts Land two-eyed seeing Indigenous knowledge Western knowledge reconciliation vegetation analysis pollution |
title | “Where the Moose Were”: Fort William First Nation’s Ancestral Land, Two–Eyed Seeing, and Industrial Impacts |
title_full | “Where the Moose Were”: Fort William First Nation’s Ancestral Land, Two–Eyed Seeing, and Industrial Impacts |
title_fullStr | “Where the Moose Were”: Fort William First Nation’s Ancestral Land, Two–Eyed Seeing, and Industrial Impacts |
title_full_unstemmed | “Where the Moose Were”: Fort William First Nation’s Ancestral Land, Two–Eyed Seeing, and Industrial Impacts |
title_short | “Where the Moose Were”: Fort William First Nation’s Ancestral Land, Two–Eyed Seeing, and Industrial Impacts |
title_sort | where the moose were fort william first nation s ancestral land two eyed seeing and industrial impacts |
topic | two-eyed seeing Indigenous knowledge Western knowledge reconciliation vegetation analysis pollution |
url | https://www.mdpi.com/2073-445X/13/12/2029 |
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